Perimenopause is the new buzzword in the business of women’s health
Sarah Todd, Stat News
In January 2014, a federal judge granted the parties’ joint motion to dismiss a class-action lawsuit alleging that ZeniMax Media Inc. and Bethesda Softworks LLC misleadingly market the Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion video game. (The joint dismissal suggests the parties may have settled the case, but no settlement documents are publicly available at this time.) The complaint, which was originally filed in 2012, alleged that the companies promise the game’s “free-form” (or open-ended) nature provides players with unlimited possibilities and longevity when, in reality, an animation defect causes the game to end once its internal counter reaches the maximum level (even after only moderate use). The judge dismissed the case with prejudice, meaning that the plaintiffs cannot re-file. (Edwards et al v. ZeniMax Media Inc. and Bethesda Softworks LLC, Case No. 12-cv-00411, D. CO.).
Sarah Todd, Stat News
TINA.org finds more of the same – and then some – from retail giant.
FTC lawsuit alleged company duped consumers into signing up and then made it hard to cancel.
Your best defense against deceptive AI? A little research.
The surprising way you may be paying more for delivery.