Wednesday round-up

Greg Stohr reports at Bloomberg that “[t]he Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s independence, designed by a Democratic-controlled Congress to insulate the agency from political pressure, now risks being its downfall,” as the court gets ready to hear argument in a constitutional challenge to the structure of the bureau, Seila Law v. CFPB. At Reuters’ On the Case blog (via How Appealing), Alison Frankel writes that “the CFPB has found an unlikely champion” in the case”: “The Trump administration believes that the bureau’s lone director is unconstitutionally shielded from accountability to the president, yet the Justice Department’s final brief before oral argument urged the Supreme Court not to issue a ruling that will halt the CFPB’s ‘critical work.’”

At the Daily Caller, Chris White reports that “[a] conservative group seeking to hold big tech accountable for perceived bias filed an amicus brief Tuesday in support of Oracle” in Google v. Oracle America, a dispute over the copyright status of application programming interfaces, “as the company continues to sue Google over copyright complaints.” Jeff John Roberts reports at Fortune (via How Appealing) that, “depending on which participant you believe,” the outcome of “one of the most momentous tech cases in decades … will either safeguard future innovation or deal a deserved comeuppance to a lawless tech giant.” [Disclosure: Goldstein & Russell, P.C., whose attorneys contribute to this blog in various capacities, is among the counsel to the petitioner in this case.]

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