Entertainment Law, Media Law and Telecoms Law

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Entertainment law, media law and telecoms law thought leadership, articles, podcasts, videos and webinars from expert sources across the legal world. Explore insights covering topics such as advertising, marketing and branding, broadcasting, gaming, hotels and hospitality, publishing, and mobile and cable communications.
Article
Suspending A Suspension: FIFA's Disciplinary Committee Suspends Implementation Of Folarin Balogun's Red Card
FIFA's Disciplinary Committee suspended the implementation of U.S. Men's National Team player Folarin Balogun's one-match suspension following a controversial red card, allowing him to play in a crucial World Cup Round of 16 match. The decision has sparked intense debate about FIFA's disciplinary framework, the scope of its discretion under the FIFA Disciplinary Code, and the administration of justice in high-profile international competitions.
United States Media & IT
AB
Aird & Berlis LLP
Article
August 3, 2026 FCC EEO Deadlines For Stations In NC, SC, IL, WI, And CA
Radio and television stations in specific states face an upcoming deadline to prepare and file their annual EEO Public File Reports, with particular attention required for proper online submission and timestamp verification. The FCC continues its mid-term review process, examining two years of compliance data for television employment units in California, while stations must carefully document recruitment activities, sources, and diversity initiatives.
United States Media & IT
WR
Wiley Rein
Article
Supreme Court Weighs In On When An ISP Is Contributorily Liable For Infringement When Its Customers Are Engaging In Piracy
The U.S. Supreme Court delivered a landmark ruling in Cox Communications v. Sony Music Entertainment, addressing whether internet service providers can be held liable when their customers engage in copyright infringement. The Court's unanimous decision established new boundaries for contributory liability, requiring proof of intent to foster infringement rather than mere knowledge of user misconduct. This precedent-setting case has far-reaching implications for how technology companies and online platforms
United States Media & IT
MF
Masuda, Funai, Eifert & Mitchell, Ltd.
Article
Event In Review | Ad Agency Contracts: Key Negotiating Points, Leverage, And Getting To Win-Win
Advertising agency agreements present unique challenges in balancing legal protection with collaborative working relationships. From creative services and media buying to influencer marketing and promotions, each engagement type requires careful attention to scope definition, intellectual property rights, AI usage policies, and regulatory compliance to prevent disputes and foster productive long-term partnerships.
United States Media & IT
GA
Global Advertising Lawyers Alliance (GALA)
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Article
Suspending A Suspension: FIFA's Disciplinary Committee Suspends Implementation Of Folarin Balogun's Red Card
FIFA's Disciplinary Committee suspended the implementation of U.S. Men's National Team player Folarin Balogun's one-match suspension following a controversial red card, allowing him to play in a crucial World Cup Round of 16 match. The decision has sparked intense debate about FIFA's disciplinary framework, the scope of its discretion under the FIFA Disciplinary Code, and the administration of justice in high-profile international competitions.
United States Media & IT
AB
Aird & Berlis LLP
Article
Congress Examines Pro Sports On Streaming Platforms, Questions Need For Antitrust Exemptions
The U.S. House Judiciary Committee recently examined how professional sports' migration from broadcast TV to streaming platforms affects consumers, questioning whether the 1961 Sports Broadcasting Act still serves its original purpose. The committee explored concerns about rising costs, exclusive streaming deals, and whether professional sports leagues still need their antitrust exemption in today's digital media landscape.
United States Anti-trust
HK
Holland & Knight
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Article
Final Written Decision On IPR Filed Against Patent 11,874,910 B2 "Facial Recognition Authentication System Including Path Parameters" Denied For Improper Motivation To Combine Prior Art
The Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB) issued a final written decision denying an inter partes review petition against FaceTec, Inc.'s facial recognition authentication patent, finding that the petitioner failed to demonstrate adequate motivation to combine prior art references. The decision centered on whether perspective distortion techniques could be used to verify three-dimensionality in facial authentication systems, with the PTAB determining that the cited prior art did not teach the claimed verific
United States IP
OM
Oblon, McClelland, Maier & Neustadt, L.L.P
Article
AI And Attorney-Client Privilege: What Employers Should Know
A federal court ruling examines whether attorney-client privilege and work-product protections extend to materials created when a criminal defendant independently used a consumer AI platform to analyze confidential attorney discussions and generate defense strategy reports. The decision addresses critical questions about privilege waiver when clients share attorney communications with third-party AI tools that lack robust confidentiality safeguards.
United States Litigation
MF
Masuda, Funai, Eifert & Mitchell, Ltd.
Video
Bracewell Explains – Why Traditional Insurance Policies May Fall Short For Data Centers (Video)
Data center construction is accelerating to meet growing demand for digital infrastructure, but are companies adequately prepared for the unique insurance challenges these complex operations present? As projects grow larger and coverage becomes distributed among multiple insurers, understanding policy adequacy and reducing coverage dispute risks becomes critical for organizations investing in this rapidly expanding sector.
United States Insurance
B
Bracewell
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Article
NIL Rights In The Age Of AI Deepfakes
Artificial intelligence has made it possible to create convincing videos of athletes endorsing products without their knowledge or consent, fundamentally challenging what name, image and likeness (NIL) rights mean in practice. As deepfakes become more sophisticated and widespread, existing legal protections designed to give athletes and public figures control over their identities are proving inadequate against unauthorized commercial exploitation and reputational harm. This emerging threat requires busines
United States IP
DS
Dinsmore & Shohl
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Article
Supreme Court Weighs In On When An ISP Is Contributorily Liable For Infringement When Its Customers Are Engaging In Piracy
The U.S. Supreme Court delivered a landmark ruling in Cox Communications v. Sony Music Entertainment, addressing whether internet service providers can be held liable when their customers engage in copyright infringement. The Court's unanimous decision established new boundaries for contributory liability, requiring proof of intent to foster infringement rather than mere knowledge of user misconduct. This precedent-setting case has far-reaching implications for how technology companies and online platforms
United States Media & IT
MF
Masuda, Funai, Eifert & Mitchell, Ltd.
Article
Trademark Law Alert -- Proposed Federal Act Would Protect Individuals Against AI-Generated Fakes
The proposed NO FAKES Act of 2026 seeks to establish federal protection for individuals' digital identities against AI-generated deepfakes by creating a property right in one's voice and visual likeness. This bipartisan legislation would protect all individuals, living or deceased, from unauthorized digital replicas while balancing First Amendment protections and technological innovation. The bill introduces liability frameworks, safe harbors for platforms, and enforcement mechanisms that could fundamentall
United States IP
CL
Cowan Liebowitz & Latman PC
Article
Congress Examines Pro Sports On Streaming Platforms, Questions Need For Antitrust Exemptions
The U.S. House Judiciary Committee recently examined how professional sports' migration from broadcast TV to streaming platforms affects consumers, questioning whether the 1961 Sports Broadcasting Act still serves its original purpose. The committee explored concerns about rising costs, exclusive streaming deals, and whether professional sports leagues still need their antitrust exemption in today's digital media landscape.
United States Anti-trust
HK
Holland & Knight
See more