Santana et al v. Take-Two Interactive Software, Inc.

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Case overview

Case Number:

1:15-cv-08211

Court:

New York Southern

Nature of Suit:

Other Statutory Actions

Multi Party Litigation:

Class Action

Judge:

John G. Koeltl

Firms

Companies

Sectors & Industries:

  1. January 30, 2017

    'NBA 2K' Maker Gets Win In Face Scan Suit

    The maker of an NBA video game saw a New York federal court on Monday toss a putative class action claiming the company collected and retained facial scans of gamers, after the judge said the players didn't suffer any actual harm.

  2. January 20, 2017

    Face Scan Storage Not Actual Injury, Video Game Maker Says

    The maker of an NBA video game asked a New York federal judge on Friday to toss a putative class action claiming the company collected and retained facial scans of gamers because the players didn't suffer any actual harm.

  3. June 29, 2016

    NY Judge Doubts Gamers' Face Scan Suit Meets Spokeo Bar

    A New York federal judge on Wednesday appeared skeptical that the harm alleged by consumers accusing an NBA video game maker of unlawfully collecting and retaining scans of their faces was enough to meet the standing threshold recently established by the U.S. Supreme Court, as he repeatedly pressed plaintiffs' counsel to detail an actual injury.

  4. June 28, 2016

    NBA Game Players Cite Spokeo In Face-Scanning Suit

    NBA 2K15 and 2K16 players suing the games' makers over an allegedly invasive 3-D face-scanning feature told a New York federal judge on Monday that the Supreme Court's recent Spokeo decision helps their case by clarifying that they have standing to sue.

  5. January 19, 2016

    NBA Video Game Maker Says Face Scans Don't Flout Ill. Law

    A 3-D face-scanning feature in two NBA video games is for entertainment purposes and doesn't violate the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act, the company that created the games told a New York federal court in a bid to dismiss a proposed class action on Friday.

  6. October 19, 2015

    NBA Video Game Maker Sued Over 3-D Face Scans

    Two gamers filed a potential class action against a video game developer in New York federal court on Monday, claiming the company violated Illinois law by capturing and storing 3-D scans of their faces for two video games, NBA 2K15 and NBA 2K16, and making their likenesses visible to other players online.

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