Washington — The Computer & Communications Industry Association has filed a joint amicus brief Monday night in a copyright case. The previous ruling, if left unchanged, could threaten important liability protections for some internet sites that review user-posted content before it appears online. CCIA joined several of its members and other tech companies in asking the Ninth Circuit to rehear the Mavrix v. LiveJournal case and clear up the murky decision. The brief points out that the Ninth Circuit’s ruling deviated from the text, structure and legislative history of the DMCA, all of which the panel ignored. CCIA and fellow amici argue that a rehearing is warranted not merely because of the panel’s errors, but because the serious practical consequences of its decision would be so significant. One such consequence could be that providers “scale back or abandon beneficial efforts to prevent illegal or offensive content from being posted” — a move that would be detrimental to online services, their users and copyright holders.
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May 11, 2026
CCIA UK Adds a Senior Policy Manager
London – The Computer & Communications Industry Association’s UK office is pleased to welcome new senior manager Charlotte Holloway.
Holloway has more than 15 years of experienc...
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May 7, 2026
AI Omnibus: EU Negotiators Miss Opportunities as They Seal Deal
Brussels, BELGIUM – Early this morning, EU negotiators agreed on the final text of the AI Omnibus. The deal sets out measures to simplify the AI Act, including delays to compliance deadlines.
S...
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May 6, 2026
Judge Denies Texas’ Request to Enforce Its App Store Law that Likely Violates First Amendment
Washington – A federal court rejected the Texas Attorney General’s effort to ‘unpause’ the state’s controversial App Store Accountability Act today.
Judge Robert Pitman declin...