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Search: "lawsuits"

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HeLa Cell Settlements Signal Wave of Bioethics Litigation Against Pharmaceutical Giants
Bioethics and Medical Justice
High

HeLa Cell Settlements Signal Wave of Bioethics Litigation Against Pharmaceutical Giants

5 predicted events · 14 sources

within 3-6 months
within 6-12 months
about 4 hours ago
Instagram's Parental Alerts Are Just the Beginning: What's Next for Social Media Child Safety Regulation
Social Media Child Safety
High

Instagram's Parental Alerts Are Just the Beginning: What's Next for Social Media Child Safety Regulation

7 predicted events · 5 sources

within 6-12 months
within 3-6 months
about 4 hours ago
New York's Loot Box Lawsuit Against Valve: Why the Case Will Likely Expand Before It Resolves
Valve Loot Box Lawsuit
Medium

New York's Loot Box Lawsuit Against Valve: Why the Case Will Likely Expand Before It Resolves

6 predicted events · 5 sources

within 2 months
within 6 months
about 5 hours ago
The $180 Billion Question: Why Trump's Tariff Refunds Will Trigger Years of Legal Warfare
Trump Tariff Refunds
High

The $180 Billion Question: Why Trump's Tariff Refunds Will Trigger Years of Legal Warfare

6 predicted events · 12 sources

within 1 month
within 3 months
about 5 hours ago
Trump's Tariff Strategy Enters New Phase: Constitutional Workarounds and Trade Deal Uncertainty Ahead
Trump Tariff Reset
High

Trump's Tariff Strategy Enters New Phase: Constitutional Workarounds and Trade Deal Uncertainty Ahead

7 predicted events · 20 sources

within 1 month
within 2 weeks
about 5 hours ago
Prediction Markets Face Regulatory Reckoning as Kalshi's Insider Trading Cases Signal Industry-Wide Crackdown
Prediction Market Regulation
High

Prediction Markets Face Regulatory Reckoning as Kalshi's Insider Trading Cases Signal Industry-Wide Crackdown

7 predicted events · 6 sources

within 1-2 months
within 2-3 months
about 17 hours ago

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Daily Business News Digest — Saturday, February 28, 2026
Daily
Business

Daily Business News Digest — Saturday, February 28, 2026

Wall Street's AI enthusiasm has flipped to fear as concerns mount about widespread job losses and business disruption. J...

Sat, Feb 28
40 articles · 2 sources

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Timeline: The $130+ Billion Battle Over Trump Tariff Refunds After Supreme Court Ruling
Timeline
Business

Timeline: The $130+ Billion Battle Over Trump Tariff Refunds After Supreme Court Ruling

After the U.S. Supreme Court struck down President Trump's emergency tariffs as illegal on February 20, 2026, a complex ...

6 days
11 events · 4 major
18 articles
1 day ago

Source Articles

US government seeks delay on tariff refund court hearing, faces above 2,000 lawsuits
South China Morning Post
about 6 hours ago

US government seeks delay on tariff refund court hearing, faces above 2,000 lawsuits

The Trump administration is seeking to delay court proceedings over whether it must refund importers billions of dollars in tariffs recently struck down by the US Supreme Court, marking a contentious start to the next phase of the legal fight. The government wants to wait as long as four months before reviving litigation before the US Court of International Trade on the refund question, according to a filing by the Justice Department late Friday. “Complexity in the future counsels appropriately...

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FedEx says it will return any refunds it gets from Trump tariffs to customers
The Hill
about 19 hours ago

FedEx says it will return any refunds it gets from Trump tariffs to customers

Delivery giant FedEx said it will return to customers any refunds it gets from President Trump’s tariffs after the Supreme Court ruled them unlawful last week.  FedEx is among more than 1,000 companies that have filed lawsuits with the U.S. Court of International Trade to recoup the costs of Trump's tariffs, mostly filed before the...

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Trump Faces 2,000 Tariff Lawsuits Following Supreme Court Loss
Bloomberg
about 19 hours ago

Trump Faces 2,000 Tariff Lawsuits Following Supreme Court Loss

In the days since the US Supreme Court declared most of President Donald Trump’s global tariffs illegal, more than 100 companies filed new lawsuits, underscoring widespread concerns that the administration won’t readily refund the billions of dollars it’s already collected.

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Meta sues advertisers in Brazil and China over 'celeb bait' scams
Engadget
1 day ago

Meta sues advertisers in Brazil and China over 'celeb bait' scams

Meta has sued the people and groups behind three scam operations that used images and deepfakes of celebrities to lure users to scam websites. According to the company, the three entities were based in China and Brazil and targeted people in the US, Japan and other countries. The ads promoted fraudulent investment schemes and fake health products. Meta said that it had filed lawsuits against several people in Brazil who promoted fake or unapproved healthcare products and online courses promoting them. The company also sued a China-based entity it says used ads featuring celebrities "as part of a larger fraud scheme that lured people into joining so-called investment groups." The company didn't provide details on how many ads these groups had run on Facebook, how many social media users had seen or interacted with the ads or how long the scammers had been operating on the platform. So-called "celeb bait" ads have been a long-running issue for the company. Engadget has previously documented celeb bait scams on Facebook, including ones that frequently use Elon Musk and Fox News personalities to hawk fake cures for diabetes. The Oversight Board has also criticized the company for not doing enough to combat such scams. In its update, Meta says that "because scam ads are designed to look real, they’re not always easy to detect." The company also noted that it has now enrolled "more than 500,000" celebrities and public figures into its facial recognition system that's meant to automatically detect scam ads using the faces of famous people.  Meta's handling of scammy advertisers has come under increased scrutiny in recent months after Reuters reported that researchers at the company at one point estimated that as much as 10 percent of its ad revenue could be coming from scams. The fact that Meta has made billions of dollars from problematic advertisers has also caused the company to be slow to take action against repeat offenders. In addition to the groups behind the celeb

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Canadian government demands safety changes from OpenAI
Engadget
3 days ago

Canadian government demands safety changes from OpenAI

Canadian officials summoned leaders from OpenAI to Ottawa this week to address safety concerns about ChatGPT. The crux of the government concerns was that OpenAI did not notify authorities when it banned the account of a user who allegedly committed a mass shooting in British Columbia earlier this month.  "The message that we delivered, in no uncertain terms, was that we have ‌an expectation that there are going to ⁠be changes implemented, and if they're not forthcoming very quickly, the government is going to be making changes," Justice Minister Sean Fraser said of the company and its AI chatbot. It's unclear what those government-led changes or rules might be. There have been two previous, unsuccessful attempts to pass an online harms act in Canada. A recent report by The Wall Street Journal claimed that in 2025, some OpenAI employees flagged the account of the alleged shooter, Jesse Van Rootselaar, as containing potential warnings of committing real-world violence and called for leadership to notify law enforcement. Although Van Rootselaar's account was banned for policy violations, a company rep said that the account activity did not meet OpenAI's criteria for engaging the local police.  “Those reports were deeply disturbing, reports saying that OpenAI did not contact law enforcement in a timely manner," said Canadian Artificial Intelligence Minister Evan Solomon ahead of the discussion with company leaders. "We will have a sit-down meeting to have an explanation of their safety protocols and when they escalate and their thresholds of escalation to police, so we have a better understanding of what’s happening and what they do." OpenAI has been implicated in mulitple wrongful death suits. The company's ChatGPT was accused of encouraging "paranoid beliefs" before a man killed his mother and himself in a December 2025 lawsuit. It is also at the center of one of several wrongful death lawsuits against the makers of AI chatbots for helping teenagers plan and commit s

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xAI's trade secret lawsuit against OpenAI has been dismissed
Engadget
3 days ago

xAI's trade secret lawsuit against OpenAI has been dismissed

OpenAI has successfully convinced the court to dismiss the lawsuit filed by Elon Musk’s xAI, accusing the company of stealing its trade secrets. In her decision, US District Judge Rita F. Lin wrote that xAI’s complaint “does not point to any misconduct by OpenAI” and instead attributes all listed misconducts to its eight former employees who “ left for OpenAI at around the same time.” Lin said that xAI accused two of its former employees of stealing its source code before leaving at a time when they were already speaking to an OpenAI recruiter. However, the company didn’t say if the recruiter told those former employees to do so. xAI’s lawsuit also accuses two other former employees of keeping their work chats on their devices even after leaving, another of refusing to provide certifications related to confidential information after his departure, and another of unsuccessfully trying to access xAI hiring and datacenter optimization information when he was already working for OpenAI. “Notably absent are allegations about the conduct of OpenAI itself,” the judge noted. xAI didn’t include any information that directly accuses OpenAI of making those employees steal its trade secrets. It also didn’t include allegations that those former employees used any stolen trade secrets after they were already working for OpenAI. To be precise, OpenAI’s motion for dismissal was granted with leave to amend, so the lawsuit may not be completely over just yet. That means xAI can still file an amended complaint addressing what the judge wrote in her decision until March 17, 2026. OpenAI and xAI have a longstanding feud, and this is just one of the several lawsuits between the two companies. In fact, Musk has an ongoing complaint against OpenAI and Microsoft, accusing the former of violating its nonprofit status. Musk, who was an early funder of OpenAI, is now asking the company for $79 billion to $134 billion in damages from “wrongful gains.” This article originally appeared on Eng

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Little Clarity on Legality of Trump’s Foreign Aid Shutdown One Year After
Foreign Policy
5 days ago

Little Clarity on Legality of Trump’s Foreign Aid Shutdown One Year After

Lawsuits to reinstate frozen foreign aid have been hampered by questions of standing, jurisdiction, and legal technicalities.

Oil Companies Get Supreme Court Hearing on Climate Suits
Bloomberg
5 days ago

Oil Companies Get Supreme Court Hearing on Climate Suits

The US Supreme Court agreed to hear an appeal by Exxon Mobil Corp. and Suncor Energy Inc. in an industry bid to stop dozens of city and state lawsuits that blame oil companies for climate change.

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