In the span of just 48 hours this week, two separate juries in two different US states delivered verdicts that could reshape the entire social media industry — not because of the dollar amounts involved, but because of what those verdicts legally establish for the first time. On Tuesday, March 24, a jury in Santa Fe, New Mexico ordered Meta to pay $375 million for failing to protect children from sexual exploitation on Facebook and Instagram. Less than 24 hours later, on Wednesday, March 25, a jury in Los Angeles found both Meta and Google (YouTube) liable for engineering addiction in young users — finding them negligent in the design of their platforms and awarding a further $6 million in damages. Two days. Two states. Two juries. Both pointing at the same conclusion: that Big Tech can no longer hide behind the legal shields it has relied on for nearly three decades. This is the story of what happened, why it matters far beyond the headline numbers, and what comes next for the s...
Jordan Crawford dunks on LeBron James.
Dunking On LeBron Jordan Crawford talks about dunking on LeBron James and the missing tapes. There were two people running the recordings and both of them had to surrender their tapes to Nike. The Footage however leaked out.
We will keep you posted on this story.
Over the summer, the Xavier University guard created quite a stir when he slammed home a two-handed dunk on James during one of The King’s trumpeted skills camps in Akron. Instantly, heavy-handed Nike officials confiscated the video so no one could see their cash cow being posterized.
Footage still leaked out, and Crawford became a YouTube hit.
Dunking On LeBron Jordan Crawford talks about dunking on LeBron James and the missing tapes. There were two people running the recordings and both of them had to surrender their tapes to Nike. The Footage however leaked out.
We will keep you posted on this story.
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