Actors Access Latest Target In Class Action Lawsuit Over Its Pay-To-Play Service
Actors Access is the latest target of a potential class action lawsuit for its pay-to-play model.
Actors Access is the latest target of a potential class action lawsuit for its pay-to-play model.
Actors Access, the leading online platform for film and TV casting, was hit with a class action lawsuit on Wednesday, alleging that it illegally charges performers for access to auditions.
Four months after SAG-AFTRA warned casting websites that it was illegal to collect fees from actors who want to submit themselves for commercial casting, a California-based public interest firm has filed a potential class action lawsuit against Casting Networks for its controversial pay-to-play model.
Performers allege Casting Networks violated a California law related to charging actors for employment opportunities, among other laws for fraud and unfair competition.
A group of actors filed a class action lawsuit Tuesday against Casting Networks, one of a handful of websites that connects actors to commercial auditions, alleging that the platform functions as an illegal pay-for-play system.
Casting Networks LLC is facing a proposed class action filed Tuesday by actors alleging the audition site breaks a California law by charging them for job opportunities.
When Clarkson Law Firm PC launched a legal crusade last year accusing several of the world’s largest companies in a string of class actions of stealing everything ever created and shared on the internet for their artificial intelligence models, it led them down an unexpected path into the world of online dating
In early February, Microsoft accused the plaintiffs suing the software maker and its partner OpenAI over alleged AI privacy violations of evoking “doomsday hyperbole about AI as a threat to civilization.”
Consumers who say their privacy was violated by Microsoft Corp. and OpenAI LP’s products are urging California federal court not to dismiss their complaint, saying it clearly and in detail lays out the basis for their allegations.
Clarkson Law Firm filed a federal class action lawsuit against Match Group, the parent company for popular online dating applications Hinge, Tinder, and The League.