Mosley v SARL Google
Mosley v SARL Google was a 2013 French court case in which a former president of the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile, Max Mosley, attempted to make the Internet search engine Google remove images of him engaging in a sado-masochistic sex act with several prostitutes. [1][2]
The publication of the images in the now-defunct British newspaper News of the World was litigated in Mosley v News Group Newspapers and resulted in Mosley being awarded £60,000 in damages.
References
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Google litigation
- Criticism of Google
- Feldman v. Google, Inc. (2007)
- Rescuecom Corp. v. Google Inc. (2009)
- Goddard v. Google, Inc. (2009)
- Rosetta Stone Ltd. v. Google, Inc. (2012)
- Google, Inc. v. American Blind & Wallpaper Factory, Inc. (2017)
- Jedi Blue
- European Union (2010–present)
- United States v. Adobe Systems, Inc., Apple Inc., Google Inc., Intel Corporation, Intuit, Inc., and Pixar (2011)
- Umar Javeed, Sukarma Thapar, Aaqib Javeed vs. Google LLC and Ors. (2019)
- United States v. Google LLC (2020)
- United States v. Google LLC (2023)
- Rocky Mountain Bank v. Google, Inc. (2009)
- Hibnick v. Google, Inc. (2010)
- United States v. Google Inc. (2012)
- Judgement of the German Federal Court of Justice on Google's autocomplete function (2013)
- Joffe v. Google, Inc. (2013)
- Mosley v SARL Google (2013)
- Google Spain v AEPD and Mario Costeja González (2014)
- Frank v. Gaos (2019)
- Garcia v. Google, Inc. (2015)
- Google LLC v Defteros (2020)
- Epic Games v. Google (2021)
- Gonzalez v. Google LLC (2022)
- Category
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