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Entertainment, Arts, and Sports Law Commons™
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- Murphy; Murphy v. National; NCAA; Cyberdefensive; Regulation; Regulation of Sports; Sports; Betting; Sports Gambling; Online Gambling; Hackers; Cybersecurity; FTC; SEC; Sports Gambling; Gambling; PASPA; Sports Betting; Gaming Enforcement (1)
- Youtube; Let's Play; Copyright; Unlicensed Copyright; Fair Use; Fair Use Doctrine; Nintendo; Let's Play videos; Copyright holders; Nintendo Creators Program; Fair use defense; contracts; contractual obligations; fan-created; recordings; video games; gamers; Twitch; user-generated; video hosting; revenue; DMCA; Content ID (1)
Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Entertainment, Arts, and Sports Law
Playing Fair: Youtube, Nintendo, And The Lost Balance Of Online Fair Use, Natalie Marfo
Playing Fair: Youtube, Nintendo, And The Lost Balance Of Online Fair Use, Natalie Marfo
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
Over the past decade, YouTube saw an upsurge in the popularity of “Let’s Play” videos. While positive for YouTube, this uptick was not without controversy. Let’s Play videos use unlicensed copyrighted materials, frustrating copyright holders. YouTube attempted to curb such usages by demonetizing and removing thousands of Let’s Play videos. Let’s Play creators struck back, arguing that the fair use doctrine protects their works. An increasing number of powerful companies, like Nintendo, began exploiting the ambiguity of the fair use doctrine against the genre; forcing potentially legal works to request permission and payment for Let’s Play videos, without a determination …
On The Clock, Best Bet To Draft Cyberdefensive Linemen: Federal Regulation Of Sports Betting From A Cybersecurity Perspective, William H. Williams
On The Clock, Best Bet To Draft Cyberdefensive Linemen: Federal Regulation Of Sports Betting From A Cybersecurity Perspective, William H. Williams
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
On May 14, 2018, Justice Alito delivered the majority opinion for the United States Supreme Court in Murphy v. National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). The Professional and Amateur Protection Act (PASPA), a twenty-six-year-old federal statute, was deemed unconstitutional; thus, this decision allows state legislatures to legalize sports betting within their borders. With many states independently legalizing sports gambling, the regulatory landscape throughout the country is becoming a patchwork of state statutes. Additionally, top tier sporting organizations heavily depend on data analytics to formulate game plan strategy, train efficiently, rehab player injuries, gauge team and player performance, etc. The popularity of …