+ BNSF must face EEOC lawsuit.

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The Afternoon Docket

The Afternoon Docket

A newsletter by Reuters and Westlaw

 

By Sara Merken

What's going on today?

  • The White House said it has fired Surface Transportation Board member Robert Primus, as the U.S. rail regulator considers the proposed $85-billion merger of Union Pacific and Norfolk Southern.
  • Software developer Eliza Labs has sued Elon Musk’s X, accusing it of extracting valuable information from the company before suspending its account on the social media platform and launching copycat AI products.
 

Fed Governor Cook sues Trump over his attempt to fire her

 

REUTERS/Jim Urquhart/File Photo

Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook filed a lawsuit today claiming President Trump has no power to remove her from office, setting up a legal battle that could reset long-established norms for the U.S. central bank's independence.

The lawsuit said Trump violated a federal law allowing him to remove a Fed governor only "for cause" when the president took the unprecedented step on August 25 of announcing he would fire her. Trump has accused Cook of committing mortgage fraud in 2021, a year before she joined the central bank's governing body.

>> Read the complaint here.

Cook also filed a motion for a temporary restraining order which declares that Trump's effort to fire her is unlawful and seeks to bar the Fed from taking steps to remove her pending further litigation. A hearing on the motion is set for 10 a.m. EDT tomorrow. Read more from Daniel Wiessner.

 

More top news

  • Fed governor, CDC director turn to top Washington lawyer in Trump fights
  • BNSF must face US EEOC lawsuit alleging hostility toward women at Nebraska railyard
  • White House fires member of railroad-regulating Surface Transportation Board
  • Musk’s X hit with antitrust lawsuit by software startup Eliza Labs
  • Kennedy says CDC must deliver on Trump's agenda after White House fires director
  • In Chicago, locals prepare for Trump's possible deployment of National Guard
  • Boeing seeks EU approval for Spirit deal
  • Kimberly-Clark to pay up to $40 million over sale of adulterated surgical gowns, US DOJ says
 
 

Anthropic’s surprise settlement adds new wrinkle in AI copyright war

 

REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

Anthropic's class action settlement with a group of U.S. authors this week was a first, but legal experts said the case's distinct qualities complicate the deal's potential influence on a wave of ongoing copyright lawsuits against other artificial intelligence focused companies like OpenAI, Microsoft and Meta.

Amazon-backed Anthropic was under particular pressure, with a trial looming in December after a judge found it liable for pirating millions of copyrighted books. The terms of the settlement, which require a judge's approval, are not yet public. And U.S. courts have just begun to wrestle with novel copyright questions related to generative AI, which could prompt other defendants to hold out for favorable rulings.

Anthropic was in "a unique situation," said Cornell Law School professor James Grimmelmann, with as much as $1 trillion in piracy damages at stake in its worst-case scenario. "It's possible that this settlement could be a model for other cases, but it really depends on the details," he said.

Read more from Blake Brittain.

 

In other news ...

The U.S. will not participate in a U.N. review of its human rights record, officials said, a move that rights advocates called a worrying retreat from Washington's global engagement on rights and justice issues … The European Commission proposed removing duties on imported U.S. industrial goods in return for reduced U.S. tariffs on European cars … Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said the AI boom is far from over after a tepid sales forecast … Tensions between the U.S. and Venezuela are rising amid a large U.S. naval buildup in the Southern Caribbean and nearby waters. Plus, a look inside Trump's frantic dash for Ukraine peace.

 
 

Contact

Sara Merken

 

sara.merken@thomsonreuters.com

@saramerken