Survivor Lawsuit Against Twitter Moves to Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals
The Ninth Circuit’s order means that the court will consider legal protections for survivors of online sexual abuse and sexual exploitation.
The Ninth Circuit’s order means that the court will consider legal protections for survivors of online sexual abuse and sexual exploitation.
Originally Published at Daily Maverick By Robyn Wolfson Vorster According to Dr Marcel van der Watt, a former member of the Hawks with almost 20 years’
Originally Published at Bloomberg Law By Martina Barash Two young men can proceed with a claim that Twitter Inc. benefited from sex trafficking involving them as teenagers
Originally Published at Protocol By Ben Brody A lawsuit in California can proceed against Twitter by two young men who say the site was slow to remove explicit
WASHINGTON, DC (August 19, 2021) - The National Center on Sexual Exploitation Law Center (NCOSE), The Haba Law Firm, and The Matiasic Firm received the order allowing the
Originally Published at Courthouse News By Nicholas Iovino In a 56-page ruling, U.S. Magistrate Judge Joseph Spero rejected that argument. He found the complaint adequately alleged the
All child pornography is illegal contraband that can get you serious jail time. But apparently not if you’re Twitter.
The National Center on Sexual Exploitation Law Center (NCOSE), The Haba Law Firm, and The Matiasic Firm is asking the United States District Court for the Northern District of California to deny Twitter’s Motion to Dismiss the lawsuit, John Doe #1 and John Doe #2 v. Twitter, Inc., filed by two survivors of child sexual abuse who were trafficked and exploited on the social media platform.
Ep. 38 Lisa Habba and Peter Gentala reveal the tragic story that led to a lawsuit against Twitter. Child sexual abuse materials (or CSAM, aka
The National Center on Sexual Exploitation Law Center (NCOSE), The Haba Law Firm, and The Matiasic Firm are suing Twitter on behalf of a second survivor of child sexual abuse who was trafficked on the social media platform.
Originally Published at Bloomberg By Todd Shields The teen was in high school when his secret spilled onto the internet, driving him to consider suicide: classmates
When John Doe was only 13 years old, a tragic series of events unfolded that he was powerless to stop and Twitter made money off