2011 was the best year ever for air traffic safety. A triumph of air safety regulation perhaps.
2011 was the best year ever for air traffic safety. A triumph of air safety regulation perhaps.
Posted by Brian Wolfman on Saturday, December 31, 2011 at 04:36 PM | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
by Paul Alan Levy
Accepting an argument advanced by Public Citizen as amicus curiae as well as by Xcentric Ventures, the operator of Ripoff Report, a Florida appeals court has held that section 230's immunity for the providers of interactive computer services extends to requests for injunctive relief and not just to claims for damages. In Giordano v. Romeo, about which I previously blogged here and here, the court said that immunity from "any actions" includes actions seeking injunctive relief.
In our amicus brief, we argued that the fact that the original provider of an allegedly tortious statement joined in seeking the injunctive relief to remove it had no proper bearing on the outcome, not just as a matter of the language of the statute but also as a matter of public policy. Faced with the prospect of an action for damages, it is all too possible that the original speaker will go along with injunctive relief against someone else to avoid facing the expense of litigation (or a damages judgment), regardless of whether she is actually liable for defamation. Thus, a rule allowing injunctions poses some of the same problems of the heckler's veto that makes section 230 immunity so important as a protection for the hosting of uncomfortable truths.
Posted by Paul Levy on Thursday, December 29, 2011 at 05:17 PM | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
The ABA Journal has an interesting story on the problem of obtaining and paying for law school debt. As the article notes, many students must borrow greater than ever amounts to attend law school, with employment and income possibilities on the wane. Although law school applications are down this year, most schools will not have a problem maintaining their enrollment numbers. It does appear, however, that at some point in the near future, many schools will have to deal with the question of how to find an academically and financially qualified student body.
Here are a few of the article’s concluding paragraphs:
As today’s prospective law students survey their options, they see few career paths that are affordable and intellectually challenging, and that offer secure economic returns and the potential to be socially meaningful. Based on the other alternatives, many still argue that a law degree is as good a bet as any. This may be true. But the more vexing question is why a gambling metaphor now seems so apt for legal education.
Six figures of debt, a heavy interest burden and poor job prospects—this is no way to begin a legal career. Some graduates will no doubt hang their own shingles and build successful practices, but many others will start practicing law without proper capital or mentorship. This is dangerous territory for the profession. Dating back to the 1950s, research on lawyers has shown a strong link between lawyer misconduct and the economic stress of too many lawyers chasing too little, unsophisticated legal work.
The easy credit that feeds legal education will eventually exact costs that go beyond recent law school graduates.
Posted by Richard Alderman on Thursday, December 29, 2011 at 09:56 AM | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
Posted by Jeff Sovern on Friday, December 23, 2011 at 08:58 PM in Consumer Law Scholarship | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
David Lazarus has this column on toy safety just in time for the final toy buying surge.
Posted by Brian Wolfman on Friday, December 23, 2011 at 06:38 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Here. The piece reports that in Missouri "in 2011, some 2.43 million payday loans were made — this in a state with a population of less than 6 million — and the average APR on those loans was an eye-popping 444%." And another excerpt:
Installment loans are bigger than payday loans, and they’re not subject to biennial surveys in the same way that payday lenders are. But just eyeballing the sheer number of these entities, and the money they’re putting into opposing the current bill, I think it’s fair to assume that they’re more or less the same size as the payday lenders, in aggregate.
Which means that the number of loans made in Missouri every year at an interest rate of more than 36% is actually much greater than 2.43 million: it could be more like 4 million. Which is crazy, given the size of the population.
And one more quote:
But the most interesting thing about the Missouri debate, for me, is the role of a group calling itself Stand Up Missouri, which has promulgated a particularly tasteless video which implies that standing up for high-interest-rate lenders is somehow analogous to the acts of the “poor people who followed Dr. King and walked with him hundreds of miles because they believed in civil rights that much”
Posted by Jeff Sovern on Thursday, December 22, 2011 at 07:09 PM in Predatory Lending | Permalink | Comments (5) | TrackBack (0)
Posted by Brian Wolfman on Monday, December 19, 2011 at 03:04 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
by Paul Alan Levy
This week the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York issued an excellent decision rejecting a series of bogus trademark claims and hence a motion for a preliminary injunction brought by Ascentive, a software maker, against Opinion Corp., whose PissedConsumer web site provides a forum for consumers to post complaints (or praise). Opinion Corp. hosts about a hundred messages about an Ascentive product that purports to enable home computer users to check for problems and increase a computer’s speed. (There are actually two separate plaintiffs, because two suits were consolidated, but for brevity’s sake I discuss only one of the plaintiffs here).
Opinion Corp. hypes the reviews on its web sites, and it hypes them like Ripoff Report on steroids — it creates a third-level domain for complaints about the company so that its name shows up in the domain name and not just the path; it loads the substance of reviews into the title tag and the keyword and description meta-tags; and more generally it uses sophisticated search engine optimization techniques (“SEO”) so that complaints about each company show up prominently in searches for a given company or product name. Ascentive’s suit claims that the use of its trademark to draw consumer eyes to Opinion Corp.’s web pages, where they would see not only criticism but advertising, is a commercial use that infringes its trademark.
Posted by Paul Levy on Friday, December 16, 2011 at 04:20 PM | Permalink | Comments (4) | TrackBack (0)
As explained in the LA Times, the SEC is going after the former top executives of Fannie and Freddie. It's about the subprime market (of course):
Six former top executives of housing finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were accused of securities fraud Friday by federal regulators for allegedly misleading investors about the size of the companies' risky subprime mortgage holdings.
Posted by Brian Wolfman on Friday, December 16, 2011 at 12:13 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
We blogged earlier on the consumer movement to make job data for law graduates more transparent. The University of Chicago Law School has just gone public with a raft of data that many schools do not provide (at least not in the same detail). Chicago says how many of its graduates are employed nine months after graduation, in what type of job (including whether the job requires a J.D. and bar passage), for how much money, in what part of the country, etc. Chicago says that it is following Yale Law School's lead. Here's how Chicago introduces its data:
The Law School has long proudly provided data about employment outcomes to prospective students, admitted students, current students, and alumni in various forms. In today’s market, we understand that prospective students want and need more information than ever before in order to make decisions about their futures. We are pleased to offer extensive data below about employment outcomes, and we thank our friends at Yale Law School for providing an excellent model for this information. We have provided our data in the same format as Yale to facilitate easy comparison by prospective students.
Posted by Brian Wolfman on Friday, December 16, 2011 at 10:28 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)