The island brought in $32 million last year, more than 10 percent of its G.D.P., from companies registering domain names that end in “.ai”.
https://t.co/uaapJfcedr
Another legal loss for trump. This time a UDRP action he initiated over the domain name <https://t.co/nuu5DBtXUm>:
https://t.co/1zr6nxbPta
I represented the prevailing respondent/defendant via Lewis & Lin.
This Sports Illustrated story is wild.
The TLDR is that they bought AI-generated headshots and created fake writer profiles so they could publish AI-generated content and make it look real.
They then deleted the content when asked about it.
Super sad. SI used to be the best.
Section 2(c) protects a privacy interest that distinguishes the “Trump Too Small” case (Vidal v. Elster) from the recent SCOTUS trademark cases addressing trademark registration and First Amendment law. Oral argument at the Supreme Court tomorrow: https://t.co/6HjUEGytnx
@rtushnet "The purpose of requiring the consent of a living individual to the registration of his or her name, signature, or portrait is to protect rights of privacy and publicity that living persons have in the designations that identify them" https://t.co/PNITcCsJF7
CAFC reverses TTAB decision applying Section 2(c) bar requiring consent of living individual named in a trademark, ruling the gov’t doesn’t have a privacy/publicity interest in restricting speech critical of public officials/figures, absent actual malice: https://t.co/Wi9CTJZDeR
Here, the trademark application at issue is for the mark TRUMP TOO SMALL for shirts. The CAFC notes its decision is on an “as-applied challenge,” meaning unconstitutional in this specific context, not in the statute. Section 2(c) lives, for now, but it’s not entirely clear how.
“The New York-based restaurant is named after a literal Google search, betting it can bring in customers with the power of SEO—the practice of making a business, website, or content more findable in search engine results.”
https://t.co/R8PRyvqTWt
Dick was a football player personified. He played the game the way it’s supposed to be played. He will be missed by all the Chicago Bear family. RIP my friend!