Word: sue
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Unresponsive companies are usually slapped with a lawsuit from the university, though Calixto says he does not recklessly sue every company that violates the trademark rights...
...woman allegedly inserting a disembodied finger into her own bowl of chili, but that she assumedly did so as part of a concocted get-rich-quick scheme. True, I make an assumption here about Ayala’s motives, but when she hired an attorney and threatened to sue immediately after reporting her fraudulent claim, Ayala made that assumption a safe...
Heath care is likely the most important victim of America’s insatiable urge to sue; fears of malpractice suits push doctors to over-medicate their patients and employ expensive medical procedures excessively. In the last thirty years, for example, the number of American babies delivered by Caesarian section has increased five-fold, an increase fueled in part by bank-breaking jury awards in malpractice suits that found doctors liable for the pain and suffering of patients born with congenital diseases, such as cerebral palsy. A 2003 study in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, however, found that...
...left Canal Plus soon after. Channel management, which has undergone considerable turnover since that time, says it does not have the facts to comment on the allegations, but insists that such practices are not tolerated at the channel now. Gaccio is saying little, although he intends to sue for invasion of privacy, which he hopes may shed light on the other dozen or so employees Martinet says he was told to investigate. "I fear this happens more than we imagine," Gaccio told Time, adding he'd like to speak with Martinet about the case. "An exchange between...
Even as the recording and movie industries sue hundreds of college students for illegally swapping files, popular musicians such as David Byrne, the Beastie Boys, and Chuck D. and Fine Arts Militia are encouraging the very behavior the industry is trying to stop: sampling, copying, remixing and circulating their songs online for free. Under a novel licensing scheme called Creative Commons (CC), developed by Stanford law professor Lawrence Lessig, artists can publish their work under middle-ground protection as "some rights reserved" instead of "all rights reserved." That way, others can listen to or remix the work--usually for noncommercial...