Tech Law: FCC Eye on Arbitron, Intel Unfair Charges, Vizio Sues Funai, More
A look at highlights of the past week in the high tech legal world: courts, regulation, and lawsuits.
FCC to investigate Arbitron -- The Federal Communications Commission is launching an investigation into whether Arbitron's audience measuring device undercounts minority viewers. [Source: Ars Technica]
Amazon countersues Discovery -- Discovery Communications had sued Amazon for alleged patent infringement over the Kindle. Now the latter countersues the former, also on patent grounds. [Source: Ars Technica]
Intel expects tough sledding fighting EU action -- Intel general counsel Bruce Sewell expects that fighting antitrust charges in Europe will be an "uphill battle." [Source: Associated Press]
And more charges of Intel unfair competition -- AMD claimed that Intel made a deal with Apple so the company would not use AMD chips. Meanwhile, Nokia accused Intel of unfair pricing. No one has headed to court yet -- so far as we know. [Source: CNET, Reuters]
Craigslist and South Carolina square off -- The attorney general of South Carolina said that he planned to prosecute Craigslist for continuing to display erotic service ads that had not run their course of publication. In return, Craigslist notes that said AG isn't going after print publications with more explicit ads and so sues the AG in return. [Source: Ars Technica here, ZDNET Behind the Lines]
Vizio sues Funai-- As part of a long-running legal batter, is suing Funai for alleged patent infringement. [Source: DigiTimes]
The family that sues together -- Talk about togetherness in the courts, a woman is suing Google for trademark infringement while her husband sues the company for patent infringement. [Source: TechDirt]
Microsoft and Linux Foundation oppose implied warranties -- Both Microsoft and the Linux Foundation have found something they agree on: neither likes the American Law Institute's proposal that software ship with an implied warranty of no material defects. Hey, they aren't bugs, they're features. [Source: CNET Beyond Binary]
Gavel image via Flickr user Thomas Roche, CC 2.0.