Food for thought: is an unauthorised photo of your restaurant meal an IP breach? – Legal Week

Posted February 19th, 2014 in consent, food, intellectual property, internet, misrepresentation, news, photography by sally

‘I do it. My friends do it. And I suspect that you’ve occasionally done it. It is what is colloquially referred to as ‘food porn’ – the salivating over restaurant menus online in preparation for a meal and then, depending on your social media connectedness, the Instagram shot of what you are about to devour.

One would think the broadcasting of delicious delicacies by diners would be welcomed by chefs and restaurateurs as free advertising of their wares. Not so. France TV Info reports that Gilles Goujon, who operates a three-starred restaurant called L’Auberge du vieux Puits in the south of France declares that such activities are not only poor etiquette (fair enough) but, when his dishes appear online, it takes away “a little bit of my intellectual property”. The BBC reports that another chef in La Madelaine-sous-Montreuil in the north of France has also inserted a ‘no camera’ provision on his menus.’

Full story

Legal Week, 18th February 2014

Source: www.legalweek.co.uk

Svensson and others v Retriever Sverige AB – WLR Daily

Posted February 17th, 2014 in copyright, EC law, internet, law reports by sally

Svensson and others v Retriever Sverige AB (Case C-466/12); [2014] WLR (D) 67

‘Under article 3(1) of Parliament and Council Directive 2001/29/EC of the of 22 May 2001 on the harmonisation of certain aspects of copyright and related rights in the information society, the provision on a website of hyperlinks to works freely available on another website did not constitute an “act of communication to the public”. Article 3(1) precluded a member state from giving wider protection to copyright holders by laying down that the concept of communication to the public included a wider range of activities than those referred to in the article.’

WLR Daily, 13th February 2014

Source: www.iclr.co.uk

Linking to free web content is legal, says EU Court – BBC News

Posted February 17th, 2014 in copyright, EC law, internet, news by sally

‘Websites can link to freely available content without the permission of the copyright holder, the European Court of Justice says.’

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BBC News, 14th February 2014

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Chat Rooms and 21st Century Insider Dealing – Six Pump Court

Posted February 14th, 2014 in banking, financial regulation, insider dealing, internet, news by sally

‘Just when the bankers and financiers of the world thought it was safe to begin trading again in the shark infested waters of high finance after showing their contrition with the payment of multi-billion dollar fines to various regulators worldwide following the debacle of the Libor Scandal, a further scandal is looming which has the potential to dwarf Libor and lead to further collateral investigations into other asset classes across the board – welcome to the year of the Forex!’

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Six Pump Court, 12th February 2014

Source: www.6pumpcourt.co.uk

Incendiary Devices: The Snowden Files – The Inside Story of the World’s Most Wanted Man – London Review of Books

Posted February 13th, 2014 in intelligence services, internet, news, whistleblowers by sally

‘What matters more: the leaker, or the leak? Any one of the following, you’d think, might have been the news story of the year, or the decade: the revelation that America’s biggest spy agency, the NSA, has information on every phone call made in the continental United States as well as abroad; that it claims to have direct access to the servers of Google, Yahoo, Facebook and all the other major web companies; that GCHQ, the NSA’s British equivalent, is siphoning off the entire internet and storing some of it for thirty days; that online encryption has been subverted and nothing is safe from government spies. The drift of the stories – which were at their peak last summer, when the Guardian and others first got their hands on Edward Snowden’s documents – was that we’re all being watched all the time. Anything we do online, and any phone call we make, is potentially being analysed by the NSA and its friends. But, as Luke Harding discloses in his book on the Snowden affair, the most viewed story in the Guardian’s history wasn’t any of this: it wasn’t a piece of news at all. It was the 12-minute video, made by Laura Poitras and Glenn Greenwald, in which Snowden explained who he was and why he’d decided to reveal what he had.’

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London Review of Books, February 2014

Source: www.lrb.co.uk

Amazon and Lush ruling shows there’s an ‘added layer of protection’ against ‘piggy-backing’ on trade marks, says expert – OUT-LAW.com

Posted February 12th, 2014 in advertising, internet, news, sale of goods, trade marks by sally

‘Cosmetics company Lush was entitled to prevent Amazon using its trade mark to promote rival goods for sale on Amazon and via Google, the High Court has ruled.’

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OUT-LAW.com, 10th February 2014

Source: www.out-law.com

Vidal-Hall v Google – cookies can cause distress – Technology Law Update

‘A recent decision in the English High Court about internet cookie use has been making waves.’

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Technology Law Update, 5th February 2014

Source: www.technology-law-blog.co.uk

Jurors face two-year jail sentence for researching cases on the internet – The Independent

Posted February 6th, 2014 in bills, contempt of court, crime, internet, juries, news by sally

‘Jurors who are found to be researching cases on the internet will be jailed for up to two years, under a new criminal offence announced today.’

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The Independent, 5th February 2014

Source: www.independent.co.uk

Woman becomes first person to be jailed for ‘trolling herself’ – The Independent

Posted February 6th, 2014 in harassment, internet, news, perverting the course of justice, sentencing by sally

‘A woman who used fake Facebook profiles to send herself hundreds of abusive messages has been jailed for 20 months.’

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The Independent, 5th February 2014

Source: www.independent.co.uk

Man jailed for trying to arrange child rape on webcam – The Guardian

Posted January 31st, 2014 in child abuse, indecent photographs of children, internet, news, sentencing by sally

‘A man who tried to persuade parents to sexually abuse and rape their children online has been jailed for five years.’

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The Guardian, 30th January 2014

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Social media abuse – could a responsible user course be the answer? – Halsbury’s Law Exchange

Posted January 31st, 2014 in harassment, internet, news, prosecutions, sentencing by sally

‘Caroline Criado- Perez mounted a wonderful and successful campaign to have a woman appear on a Bank of England note. She succeeded and Jane Austen will feature on the next £10 note – hopefully more will follow. Whilst campaigning, however, Ms Craido-Perez was subject to the most appalling online abuse on Twitter.’

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Halsbury’s Law Exchange, 30th January 2014

Source: www.halsburyslawexchange.co.uk

Online bullies go unpunished as prosecutions for abusive messages plunge by a third – Daily Telegraph

Posted January 30th, 2014 in bullying, internet, news, prosecutions by sally

‘Campaigners fear hundreds of online abusers are going unpunished under softer prosecution guidelines introduced in 2012.’

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Daily Telegraph, 30th January 2014

Source: www.telegraph.co.uk

Vidal-Hall and others v Google Inc – WLR Daily

Vidal-Hall and others v Google Inc [2014] EWHC 13 (QB); [2014] WLR (D) 21

‘A claim for misuse of private information was a tort within the meaning of para 3.1(9) of Practice Direction 6B—Service out of the jurisdiction.’

WLR Daily, 16th January 2014

Source: www.iclr.co.uk

Two jailed for Twitter abuse of feminist campaigner – The Guardian

Posted January 27th, 2014 in compensation, harassment, internet, news, sentencing, threatening behaviour by sally

‘Two people were jailed on Friday for subjecting feminist campaigner Caroline Criado-Perez to abuse on Twitter.

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The Guardian, 24th January 2014

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

New Year, new tort of misuse of private information – UK Human Rights Blog

‘A group of UK Google users called ‘Safari Users Against Google’s Secret Tracking’ have claimed that the tracking and collation of information about of their internet usage by Google amounts to misuse of personal information, and a breach of the Data Protection Act 1998. The Judge confirmed that misuse of personal information was a distinct tort. He also held that the English courts had jurisdiction to try the claims.’

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UK Human Rights Blog, 23rd January 2013

Source: www.ukhumanrightsblog.com

Gambling regulator explores options for warning consumers about unlicensed betting sites – OUT-LAW

Posted January 22nd, 2014 in gambling, internet, licensing, news by sally

‘The Gambling Commission has held talks with a number of internet service providers (ISPs) in an effort to find ways to combat unlicensed online betting in Great Britain.’

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OUT-LAW.com, 21st January 2014

Source: www.out-law.com

Google to face High Court case on alleged breach of UK data protection rules – OUT-LAW.com

Posted January 20th, 2014 in advertising, damages, data protection, internet, jurisdiction, news, privacy by sally

‘Google is to face a claim for damages before the High Court from three individuals who claim the company breached UK data protection laws by circumventing privacy settings deployed on their web browsers to serve them with personalised adverts.’

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OUT-LAW.com, 17th January 2014

Source: www.out-law.com

The Google/Safari users case: a potential revolution in DPA litigation? – Panopticon

‘I posted earlier on Tugendhat J’s judgment this morning in Vidal-Hall and Others v Google Inc [2014] EWHC 13 (QB). The judgment is now available here – thanks as ever to Bailii.’

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Panopticon, 16th January 2014

Source: www.panopticonblog.com

Google must face UK courts over claims of privacy breach of iPhone users – The Guardian

Posted January 17th, 2014 in data protection, internet, news, privacy, telecommunications by sally

‘Google has lost its high court bid to block a breach of privacy legal action launched against it in the UK by a group of British internet users.’

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The Guardian, 16th January 2014

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Sex offence terms to be removed from internet addresses – BBC News

Posted January 15th, 2014 in domain names, internet, news, sexual offences by sally

‘All new web addresses registered in the UK will be screened for terms that signal or encourage serious sexual offences.’

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BBC News, 15th January 2014

Source: www.bbc.co.uk