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City says it s not liable for act of nature after tree falls on house following 2020 storm

Nottingham lawyer offering Pet-Nup agreements to couples

Nottingham lawyer offering Pet-Nup agreements to couples amid surge of lockdown puppies If unresolved, these disputes can end up in the Small Claims Court Dominic Lee, associate lawyer at John Hooper and Co. (Image: John Hooper and Co.) Calling all dog lovers! Sign up to our TeamDogs newsletter for your weekly dose of dog news, pictures and storiesInvalid EmailSomething went wrong, please try again later. Sign up When you subscribe we will use the information you provide to send you these newsletters. Your information will be used in accordance with ourPrivacy Notice. Thank you for subscribingWe have more newslettersShow meSee ourprivacy notice

Anatomy Of A Bogus DMCA Scam Run By A Plagiarizing Website

Fri, Apr 30th 2021 7:39pm Timothy Geigner We have been banging the drum for some time now that the way the DMCA has been setup and is put in practice is wide, wide open for fraud and abuse. A huge part of the problem is how content owners police the internet in general, with the overwhelming majority of DMCA notices coming from bots and automated systems. Because of the imperfections of this technology, and our allowance of its use, the end result is that copyright policing on the internet is done with a shotgun rather than a scalpel, leading to all manner of mistakes and collateral damage. But even setting those instances aside, the fact is that DMCAing content on the internet requires so little in the way of verification that there is any true ownership of the content rights in question that bogus DMCA takedowns are the norm, not the exception. And, given how little consequence comes along with issuing a bogus DMCA notice, bad actors are practically encouraged to perform this s

If there is a company that | Legal Advice

If there is a company that misrepresented itself and took my money under a fraud contract. What steps do I need to take to expose and sue them? Asked on 4/28/21, 5:42 pm 1 Answer from Attorneys 0 users found helpful 0 attorneys agreed If the amount is $10,000 or less, you need to take them to Small Claims Court. If it is over $10k, you will want to hire a lawyer. You could try to sue yourself, but in over 30 years of litigation practice, I have never seen a person representing themselves win a case. I hear it happens, but I ve never seen it. Not good odds.Read more

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