Sony Music Entertainment sued Triller, Inc. in the U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, on Monday, August 29, 2022, alleging that Triller failed to pay licensing fees and permitted the unauthorized use of Sony's copyrighted music in the Triller app.
Articles Posted in Business and Corporate Law
On Tuesday, July 5, 2022, Ben & Jerry's sued its parent company, Unilever, in an attempt to stop the sales of its ice cream in the West Bank through a third party distributor.
Five New York City pension groups that own stock in Activision Blizzard sued the company over concerns that it undervalued itself in a wrongful and rushed sale to Microsoft.
A former partner sued his ex-firm Tuesday, claiming that it owes him hundreds of thousands of dollars in unpaid compensation and the value of his equity interest, including an interest in $250 million worth of cryptocurrency accepted by the firm as payment. The suit follows one by another former partner…
A bipartisan group of state attorneys general argues that Google has used improper anti-competitive methods to force developers and consumers to use its app store.
Companies with $100 million or more in global annual gross revenue would need to pay a percentage of the revenue received from digital advertisements shown in Maryland.
The National Labor Relations Board rejected efforts by the corporate giant to postpone an election or prevent employees from voting remotely, which echoed Amazon's previous attempts to hinder unionization at its facilities.
Filed in a federal district court in New York, the lawsuit claims that the e-commerce company is working with publishers to stifle the competition.
More than 400 Google engineers and other workers have formed a union, a rarity in Silicon Valley.
The U.S. Supreme Court announced that it would review a case testing whether the NCAA's limits on compensation for student athletes violate antitrust laws.