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''Young v. Facebook, Inc.'', 790 F. Supp. 2d 1110, is a ''pro se'' internet law case in which the plaintiff sued the social network Facebook following the termination of her user account. In her original complaint, the plaintiff, Karen Beth Young, alleged violation of her First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, negligence, and fraud.〔 In the U.S. District Court of Northern California, Facebook moved to dismiss the claim, and on October 25, 2010, presiding Judge Jeremy Fogel granted the motion to dismiss with leave to amend.〔(''Young v. Facebook, Inc.'' ), No. 5:10-cv-03579-JF/PVT (N.D. Cal. 2010).〕 Redirecting her complaint, Young alleged violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act and related state laws on disability, as well as breach of contract and negligence. Again, Facebook moved to dismiss, and Judge Fogel dismissed the case without leave to amend.〔 ==Facts== Karen Beth Young of Maryland created an account on Facebook in February 2010 in order to connect with friends, family, and strangers.〔''(Young v. Facebook Original Complaint )'', (N.D. Ca. 2010).〕 Young's mother and sister were both fighting breast cancer at the time and Young created two pages to promote cancer awareness.〔 She quickly amassed over 4,000 friends by sending friend invites to others supportive of the cancer cause and by receiving requests from strangers who were interested in and concerned about her cancer patient support efforts. Young then came across a page praying for the death of U.S. President Barack Obama, and she spoke out against the page. She was then subjected to "hatred, violence, discrimination, threats, pornography, kkk, violence and personal attacks ."〔 In conjunction with her public opposition of the hate page and her allegedly "spammy" activity, her profile was disabled.〔 Young then traveled from Maryland to Facebook's headquarters in California and sought reactivation of her account. In testimony, she stated that she did not receive "human interaction" with a Facebook account representative at Facebook's offices,〔 and had to provide a written message to a receptionist for forwarding to an unknown recipient.〔 She filled out a complaint form and was not allowed to speak with a Facebook account representative. Later, she received Facebook email stating her account was reactivated, but she was not provided any opportunity to discuss her account details so she traveled back to Maryland. Shortly thereafter, Young again found her account disabled. According to Facebook, Young had engaged in activity that violated Facebook's statement of rights and responsibilities, although Young states she did nothing to prompt the second disabling of her account〔''(Motion to Dismiss by Facebook )''.〕 which resulted in permanent termination of her account. Young then drove back to California to file a lawsuit in the Northern District of California. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「'''''Young v. Facebook, Inc.''''', 790 F. Supp. 2d 1110, is a ''pro se'' internet law case in which the plaintiff sued the social network Facebook following the termination of her user account. In her original complaint, the plaintiff, Karen Beth Young, alleged violation of her First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, negligence, and fraud. In the U.S. District Court of Northern California, Facebook moved to dismiss the claim, and on October 25, 2010, presiding Judge Jeremy Fogel granted the motion to dismiss with leave to amend.(''Young v. Facebook, Inc.'' ), No. 5:10-cv-03579-JF/PVT (N.D. Cal. 2010). Redirecting her complaint, Young alleged violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act and related state laws on disability, as well as breach of contract and negligence. Again, Facebook moved to dismiss, and Judge Fogel dismissed the case without leave to amend.==Facts==Karen Beth Young of Maryland created an account on Facebook in February 2010 in order to connect with friends, family, and strangers.''(Young v. Facebook Original Complaint )'', (N.D. Ca. 2010). Young's mother and sister were both fighting breast cancer at the time and Young created two pages to promote cancer awareness. She quickly amassed over 4,000 friends by sending friend invites to others supportive of the cancer cause and by receiving requests from strangers who were interested in and concerned about her cancer patient support efforts. Young then came across a page praying for the death of U.S. President Barack Obama, and she spoke out against the page. She was then subjected to "hatred, violence, discrimination, threats, pornography, kkk, violence and personal attacks ." In conjunction with her public opposition of the hate page and her allegedly "spammy" activity, her profile was disabled.Young then traveled from Maryland to Facebook's headquarters in California and sought reactivation of her account. In testimony, she stated that she did not receive "human interaction" with a Facebook account representative at Facebook's offices, and had to provide a written message to a receptionist for forwarding to an unknown recipient. She filled out a complaint form and was not allowed to speak with a Facebook account representative. Later, she received Facebook email stating her account was reactivated, but she was not provided any opportunity to discuss her account details so she traveled back to Maryland. Shortly thereafter, Young again found her account disabled. According to Facebook, Young had engaged in activity that violated Facebook's statement of rights and responsibilities, although Young states she did nothing to prompt the second disabling of her account''(Motion to Dismiss by Facebook )''. which resulted in permanent termination of her account. Young then drove back to California to file a lawsuit in the Northern District of California.」の詳細全文を読む 'Young v. Facebook, Inc.'', 790 F. Supp. 2d 1110, is a ''pro se'' internet law case in which the plaintiff sued the social network Facebook following the termination of her user account. In her original complaint, the plaintiff, Karen Beth Young, alleged violation of her First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, negligence, and fraud. In the U.S. District Court of Northern California, Facebook moved to dismiss the claim, and on October 25, 2010, presiding Judge Jeremy Fogel granted the motion to dismiss with leave to amend.(''Young v. Facebook, Inc.'' ), No. 5:10-cv-03579-JF/PVT (N.D. Cal. 2010). Redirecting her complaint, Young alleged violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act and related state laws on disability, as well as breach of contract and negligence. Again, Facebook moved to dismiss, and Judge Fogel dismissed the case without leave to amend.==Facts==Karen Beth Young of Maryland created an account on Facebook in February 2010 in order to connect with friends, family, and strangers.''(Young v. Facebook Original Complaint )'', (N.D. Ca. 2010). Young's mother and sister were both fighting breast cancer at the time and Young created two pages to promote cancer awareness. She quickly amassed over 4,000 friends by sending friend invites to others supportive of the cancer cause and by receiving requests from strangers who were interested in and concerned about her cancer patient support efforts. Young then came across a page praying for the death of U.S. President Barack Obama, and she spoke out against the page. She was then subjected to "hatred, violence, discrimination, threats, pornography, kkk, violence and personal attacks ." In conjunction with her public opposition of the hate page and her allegedly "spammy" activity, her profile was disabled.Young then traveled from Maryland to Facebook's headquarters in California and sought reactivation of her account. In testimony, she stated that she did not receive "human interaction" with a Facebook account representative at Facebook's offices, and had to provide a written message to a receptionist for forwarding to an unknown recipient. She filled out a complaint form and was not allowed to speak with a Facebook account representative. Later, she received Facebook email stating her account was reactivated, but she was not provided any opportunity to discuss her account details so she traveled back to Maryland. Shortly thereafter, Young again found her account disabled. According to Facebook, Young had engaged in activity that violated Facebook's statement of rights and responsibilities, although Young states she did nothing to prompt the second disabling of her account''(Motion to Dismiss by Facebook )''. which resulted in permanent termination of her account. Young then drove back to California to file a lawsuit in the Northern District of California. ''Young v. Facebook, Inc.'', 790 F. Supp. 2d 1110, is a ''pro se'' internet law case in which the plaintiff sued the social network Facebook following the termination of her user account. In her original complaint, the plaintiff, Karen Beth Young, alleged violation of her First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, negligence, and fraud.〔 In the U.S. District Court of Northern California, Facebook moved to dismiss the claim, and on October 25, 2010, presiding Judge Jeremy Fogel granted the motion to dismiss with leave to amend.〔(''Young v. Facebook, Inc.'' ), No. 5:10-cv-03579-JF/PVT (N.D. Cal. 2010).〕 Redirecting her complaint, Young alleged violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act and related state laws on disability, as well as breach of contract and negligence. Again, Facebook moved to dismiss, and Judge Fogel dismissed the case without leave to amend.〔 ==Facts== Karen Beth Young of Maryland created an account on Facebook in February 2010 in order to connect with friends, family, and strangers.〔''(Young v. Facebook Original Complaint )'', (N.D. Ca. 2010).〕 Young's mother and sister were both fighting breast cancer at the time and Young created two pages to promote cancer awareness.〔 She quickly amassed over 4,000 friends by sending friend invites to others supportive of the cancer cause and by receiving requests from strangers who were interested in and concerned about her cancer patient support efforts. Young then came across a page praying for the death of U.S. President Barack Obama, and she spoke out against the page. She was then subjected to "hatred, violence, discrimination, threats, pornography, kkk, violence and personal attacks ."〔 In conjunction with her public opposition of the hate page and her allegedly "spammy" activity, her profile was disabled.〔 Young then traveled from Maryland to Facebook's headquarters in California and sought reactivation of her account. In testimony, she stated that she did not receive "human interaction" with a Facebook account representative at Facebook's offices,〔 and had to provide a written message to a receptionist for forwarding to an unknown recipient.〔 She filled out a complaint form and was not allowed to speak with a Facebook account representative. Later, she received Facebook email stating her account was reactivated, but she was not provided any opportunity to discuss her account details so she traveled back to Maryland. Shortly thereafter, Young again found her account disabled. According to Facebook, Young had engaged in activity that violated Facebook's statement of rights and responsibilities, although Young states she did nothing to prompt the second disabling of her account〔''(Motion to Dismiss by Facebook )''.〕 which resulted in permanent termination of her account. Young then drove back to California to file a lawsuit in the Northern District of California. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「'''''Young v. Facebook, Inc.''''', 790 F. Supp. 2d 1110, is a ''pro se'' internet law case in which the plaintiff sued the social network Facebook following the termination of her user account. In her original complaint, the plaintiff, Karen Beth Young, alleged violation of her First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, negligence, and fraud. In the U.S. District Court of Northern California, Facebook moved to dismiss the claim, and on October 25, 2010, presiding Judge Jeremy Fogel granted the motion to dismiss with leave to amend.(''Young v. Facebook, Inc.'' ), No. 5:10-cv-03579-JF/PVT (N.D. Cal. 2010). Redirecting her complaint, Young alleged violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act and related state laws on disability, as well as breach of contract and negligence. Again, Facebook moved to dismiss, and Judge Fogel dismissed the case without leave to amend.==Facts==Karen Beth Young of Maryland created an account on Facebook in February 2010 in order to connect with friends, family, and strangers.''(Young v. Facebook Original Complaint )'', (N.D. Ca. 2010). Young's mother and sister were both fighting breast cancer at the time and Young created two pages to promote cancer awareness. She quickly amassed over 4,000 friends by sending friend invites to others supportive of the cancer cause and by receiving requests from strangers who were interested in and concerned about her cancer patient support efforts. Young then came across a page praying for the death of U.S. President Barack Obama, and she spoke out against the page. She was then subjected to "hatred, violence, discrimination, threats, pornography, kkk, violence and personal attacks ." In conjunction with her public opposition of the hate page and her allegedly "spammy" activity, her profile was disabled.Young then traveled from Maryland to Facebook's headquarters in California and sought reactivation of her account. In testimony, she stated that she did not receive "human interaction" with a Facebook account representative at Facebook's offices, and had to provide a written message to a receptionist for forwarding to an unknown recipient. She filled out a complaint form and was not allowed to speak with a Facebook account representative. Later, she received Facebook email stating her account was reactivated, but she was not provided any opportunity to discuss her account details so she traveled back to Maryland. Shortly thereafter, Young again found her account disabled. According to Facebook, Young had engaged in activity that violated Facebook's statement of rights and responsibilities, although Young states she did nothing to prompt the second disabling of her account''(Motion to Dismiss by Facebook )''. which resulted in permanent termination of her account. Young then drove back to California to file a lawsuit in the Northern District of California.」の詳細全文を読む ', 790 F. Supp. 2d 1110, is a ''pro se'' internet law case in which the plaintiff sued the social network Facebook following the termination of her user account. In her original complaint, the plaintiff, Karen Beth Young, alleged violation of her First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, negligence, and fraud. In the U.S. District Court of Northern California, Facebook moved to dismiss the claim, and on October 25, 2010, presiding Judge Jeremy Fogel granted the motion to dismiss with leave to amend.(''Young v. Facebook, Inc.'' ), No. 5:10-cv-03579-JF/PVT (N.D. Cal. 2010). Redirecting her complaint, Young alleged violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act and related state laws on disability, as well as breach of contract and negligence. Again, Facebook moved to dismiss, and Judge Fogel dismissed the case without leave to amend.==Facts==Karen Beth Young of Maryland created an account on Facebook in February 2010 in order to connect with friends, family, and strangers.''(Young v. Facebook Original Complaint )'', (N.D. Ca. 2010). Young's mother and sister were both fighting breast cancer at the time and Young created two pages to promote cancer awareness. She quickly amassed over 4,000 friends by sending friend invites to others supportive of the cancer cause and by receiving requests from strangers who were interested in and concerned about her cancer patient support efforts. Young then came across a page praying for the death of U.S. President Barack Obama, and she spoke out against the page. She was then subjected to "hatred, violence, discrimination, threats, pornography, kkk, violence and personal attacks ." In conjunction with her public opposition of the hate page and her allegedly "spammy" activity, her profile was disabled.Young then traveled from Maryland to Facebook's headquarters in California and sought reactivation of her account. In testimony, she stated that she did not receive "human interaction" with a Facebook account representative at Facebook's offices, and had to provide a written message to a receptionist for forwarding to an unknown recipient. She filled out a complaint form and was not allowed to speak with a Facebook account representative. Later, she received Facebook email stating her account was reactivated, but she was not provided any opportunity to discuss her account details so she traveled back to Maryland. Shortly thereafter, Young again found her account disabled. According to Facebook, Young had engaged in activity that violated Facebook's statement of rights and responsibilities, although Young states she did nothing to prompt the second disabling of her account''(Motion to Dismiss by Facebook )''. which resulted in permanent termination of her account. Young then drove back to California to file a lawsuit in the Northern District of California. ''Young v. Facebook, Inc.'', 790 F. Supp. 2d 1110, is a ''pro se'' internet law case in which the plaintiff sued the social network Facebook following the termination of her user account. In her original complaint, the plaintiff, Karen Beth Young, alleged violation of her First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, negligence, and fraud.〔 In the U.S. District Court of Northern California, Facebook moved to dismiss the claim, and on October 25, 2010, presiding Judge Jeremy Fogel granted the motion to dismiss with leave to amend.〔(''Young v. Facebook, Inc.'' ), No. 5:10-cv-03579-JF/PVT (N.D. Cal. 2010).〕 Redirecting her complaint, Young alleged violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act and related state laws on disability, as well as breach of contract and negligence. Again, Facebook moved to dismiss, and Judge Fogel dismissed the case without leave to amend.〔 ==Facts== Karen Beth Young of Maryland created an account on Facebook in February 2010 in order to connect with friends, family, and strangers.〔''(Young v. Facebook Original Complaint )'', (N.D. Ca. 2010).〕 Young's mother and sister were both fighting breast cancer at the time and Young created two pages to promote cancer awareness.〔 She quickly amassed over 4,000 friends by sending friend invites to others supportive of the cancer cause and by receiving requests from strangers who were interested in and concerned about her cancer patient support efforts. Young then came across a page praying for the death of U.S. President Barack Obama, and she spoke out against the page. She was then subjected to "hatred, violence, discrimination, threats, pornography, kkk, violence and personal attacks ."〔 In conjunction with her public opposition of the hate page and her allegedly "spammy" activity, her profile was disabled.〔 Young then traveled from Maryland to Facebook's headquarters in California and sought reactivation of her account. In testimony, she stated that she did not receive "human interaction" with a Facebook account representative at Facebook's offices,〔 and had to provide a written message to a receptionist for forwarding to an unknown recipient.〔 She filled out a complaint form and was not allowed to speak with a Facebook account representative. Later, she received Facebook email stating her account was reactivated, but she was not provided any opportunity to discuss her account details so she traveled back to Maryland. Shortly thereafter, Young again found her account disabled. According to Facebook, Young had engaged in activity that violated Facebook's statement of rights and responsibilities, although Young states she did nothing to prompt the second disabling of her account〔''(Motion to Dismiss by Facebook )''.〕 which resulted in permanent termination of her account. Young then drove back to California to file a lawsuit in the Northern District of California. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「'''''Young v. Facebook, Inc.''''', 790 F. Supp. 2d 1110, is a ''pro se'' internet law case in which the plaintiff sued the social network Facebook following the termination of her user account. In her original complaint, the plaintiff, Karen Beth Young, alleged violation of her First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, negligence, and fraud. In the U.S. District Court of Northern California, Facebook moved to dismiss the claim, and on October 25, 2010, presiding Judge Jeremy Fogel granted the motion to dismiss with leave to amend.(''Young v. Facebook, Inc.'' ), No. 5:10-cv-03579-JF/PVT (N.D. Cal. 2010). Redirecting her complaint, Young alleged violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act and related state laws on disability, as well as breach of contract and negligence. Again, Facebook moved to dismiss, and Judge Fogel dismissed the case without leave to amend.==Facts==Karen Beth Young of Maryland created an account on Facebook in February 2010 in order to connect with friends, family, and strangers.''(Young v. Facebook Original Complaint )'', (N.D. Ca. 2010). Young's mother and sister were both fighting breast cancer at the time and Young created two pages to promote cancer awareness. She quickly amassed over 4,000 friends by sending friend invites to others supportive of the cancer cause and by receiving requests from strangers who were interested in and concerned about her cancer patient support efforts. Young then came across a page praying for the death of U.S. President Barack Obama, and she spoke out against the page. She was then subjected to "hatred, violence, discrimination, threats, pornography, kkk, violence and personal attacks ." In conjunction with her public opposition of the hate page and her allegedly "spammy" activity, her profile was disabled.Young then traveled from Maryland to Facebook's headquarters in California and sought reactivation of her account. In testimony, she stated that she did not receive "human interaction" with a Facebook account representative at Facebook's offices, and had to provide a written message to a receptionist for forwarding to an unknown recipient. She filled out a complaint form and was not allowed to speak with a Facebook account representative. Later, she received Facebook email stating her account was reactivated, but she was not provided any opportunity to discuss her account details so she traveled back to Maryland. Shortly thereafter, Young again found her account disabled. According to Facebook, Young had engaged in activity that violated Facebook's statement of rights and responsibilities, although Young states she did nothing to prompt the second disabling of her account''(Motion to Dismiss by Facebook )''. which resulted in permanent termination of her account. Young then drove back to California to file a lawsuit in the Northern District of California.」の詳細全文を読む 'Young v. Facebook, Inc.'', 790 F. Supp. 2d 1110, is a ''pro se'' internet law case in which the plaintiff sued the social network Facebook following the termination of her user account. In her original complaint, the plaintiff, Karen Beth Young, alleged violation of her First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, negligence, and fraud. In the U.S. District Court of Northern California, Facebook moved to dismiss the claim, and on October 25, 2010, presiding Judge Jeremy Fogel granted the motion to dismiss with leave to amend.(''Young v. Facebook, Inc.'' ), No. 5:10-cv-03579-JF/PVT (N.D. Cal. 2010). Redirecting her complaint, Young alleged violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act and related state laws on disability, as well as breach of contract and negligence. Again, Facebook moved to dismiss, and Judge Fogel dismissed the case without leave to amend.==Facts==Karen Beth Young of Maryland created an account on Facebook in February 2010 in order to connect with friends, family, and strangers.''(Young v. Facebook Original Complaint )'', (N.D. Ca. 2010). Young's mother and sister were both fighting breast cancer at the time and Young created two pages to promote cancer awareness. She quickly amassed over 4,000 friends by sending friend invites to others supportive of the cancer cause and by receiving requests from strangers who were interested in and concerned about her cancer patient support efforts. Young then came across a page praying for the death of U.S. President Barack Obama, and she spoke out against the page. She was then subjected to "hatred, violence, discrimination, threats, pornography, kkk, violence and personal attacks ." In conjunction with her public opposition of the hate page and her allegedly "spammy" activity, her profile was disabled.Young then traveled from Maryland to Facebook's headquarters in California and sought reactivation of her account. In testimony, she stated that she did not receive "human interaction" with a Facebook account representative at Facebook's offices, and had to provide a written message to a receptionist for forwarding to an unknown recipient. She filled out a complaint form and was not allowed to speak with a Facebook account representative. Later, she received Facebook email stating her account was reactivated, but she was not provided any opportunity to discuss her account details so she traveled back to Maryland. Shortly thereafter, Young again found her account disabled. According to Facebook, Young had engaged in activity that violated Facebook's statement of rights and responsibilities, although Young states she did nothing to prompt the second disabling of her account''(Motion to Dismiss by Facebook )''. which resulted in permanent termination of her account. Young then drove back to California to file a lawsuit in the Northern District of California.">ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「'''''Young v. Facebook, Inc.''''', 790 F. Supp. 2d 1110, is a ''pro se'' internet law case in which the plaintiff sued the social network Facebook following the termination of her user account. In her original complaint, the plaintiff, Karen Beth Young, alleged violation of her First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, negligence, and fraud. In the U.S. District Court of Northern California, Facebook moved to dismiss the claim, and on October 25, 2010, presiding Judge Jeremy Fogel granted the motion to dismiss with leave to amend.(''Young v. Facebook, Inc.'' ), No. 5:10-cv-03579-JF/PVT (N.D. Cal. 2010). Redirecting her complaint, Young alleged violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act and related state laws on disability, as well as breach of contract and negligence. Again, Facebook moved to dismiss, and Judge Fogel dismissed the case without leave to amend.==Facts==Karen Beth Young of Maryland created an account on Facebook in February 2010 in order to connect with friends, family, and strangers.''(Young v. Facebook Original Complaint )'', (N.D. Ca. 2010). Young's mother and sister were both fighting breast cancer at the time and Young created two pages to promote cancer awareness. She quickly amassed over 4,000 friends by sending friend invites to others supportive of the cancer cause and by receiving requests from strangers who were interested in and concerned about her cancer patient support efforts. Young then came across a page praying for the death of U.S. President Barack Obama, and she spoke out against the page. She was then subjected to "hatred, violence, discrimination, threats, pornography, kkk, violence and personal attacks ." In conjunction with her public opposition of the hate page and her allegedly "spammy" activity, her profile was disabled.Young then traveled from Maryland to Facebook's headquarters in California and sought reactivation of her account. In testimony, she stated that she did not receive "human interaction" with a Facebook account representative at Facebook's offices, and had to provide a written message to a receptionist for forwarding to an unknown recipient. She filled out a complaint form and was not allowed to speak with a Facebook account representative. Later, she received Facebook email stating her account was reactivated, but she was not provided any opportunity to discuss her account details so she traveled back to Maryland. Shortly thereafter, Young again found her account disabled. According to Facebook, Young had engaged in activity that violated Facebook's statement of rights and responsibilities, although Young states she did nothing to prompt the second disabling of her account''(Motion to Dismiss by Facebook )''. which resulted in permanent termination of her account. Young then drove back to California to file a lawsuit in the Northern District of California.」の詳細全文を読む ', 790 F. Supp. 2d 1110, is a ''pro se'' internet law case in which the plaintiff sued the social network Facebook following the termination of her user account. In her original complaint, the plaintiff, Karen Beth Young, alleged violation of her First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, negligence, and fraud. In the U.S. District Court of Northern California, Facebook moved to dismiss the claim, and on October 25, 2010, presiding Judge Jeremy Fogel granted the motion to dismiss with leave to amend.(''Young v. Facebook, Inc.'' ), No. 5:10-cv-03579-JF/PVT (N.D. Cal. 2010). Redirecting her complaint, Young alleged violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act and related state laws on disability, as well as breach of contract and negligence. Again, Facebook moved to dismiss, and Judge Fogel dismissed the case without leave to amend.==Facts==Karen Beth Young of Maryland created an account on Facebook in February 2010 in order to connect with friends, family, and strangers.''(Young v. Facebook Original Complaint )'', (N.D. Ca. 2010). Young's mother and sister were both fighting breast cancer at the time and Young created two pages to promote cancer awareness. She quickly amassed over 4,000 friends by sending friend invites to others supportive of the cancer cause and by receiving requests from strangers who were interested in and concerned about her cancer patient support efforts. Young then came across a page praying for the death of U.S. President Barack Obama, and she spoke out against the page. She was then subjected to "hatred, violence, discrimination, threats, pornography, kkk, violence and personal attacks ." In conjunction with her public opposition of the hate page and her allegedly "spammy" activity, her profile was disabled.Young then traveled from Maryland to Facebook's headquarters in California and sought reactivation of her account. In testimony, she stated that she did not receive "human interaction" with a Facebook account representative at Facebook's offices, and had to provide a written message to a receptionist for forwarding to an unknown recipient. She filled out a complaint form and was not allowed to speak with a Facebook account representative. Later, she received Facebook email stating her account was reactivated, but she was not provided any opportunity to discuss her account details so she traveled back to Maryland. Shortly thereafter, Young again found her account disabled. According to Facebook, Young had engaged in activity that violated Facebook's statement of rights and responsibilities, although Young states she did nothing to prompt the second disabling of her account''(Motion to Dismiss by Facebook )''. which resulted in permanent termination of her account. Young then drove back to California to file a lawsuit in the Northern District of California.">ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「'''''Young v. Facebook, Inc.''''', 790 F. Supp. 2d 1110, is a ''pro se'' internet law case in which the plaintiff sued the social network Facebook following the termination of her user account. In her original complaint, the plaintiff, Karen Beth Young, alleged violation of her First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, negligence, and fraud. In the U.S. District Court of Northern California, Facebook moved to dismiss the claim, and on October 25, 2010, presiding Judge Jeremy Fogel granted the motion to dismiss with leave to amend.(''Young v. Facebook, Inc.'' ), No. 5:10-cv-03579-JF/PVT (N.D. Cal. 2010). Redirecting her complaint, Young alleged violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act and related state laws on disability, as well as breach of contract and negligence. Again, Facebook moved to dismiss, and Judge Fogel dismissed the case without leave to amend.==Facts==Karen Beth Young of Maryland created an account on Facebook in February 2010 in order to connect with friends, family, and strangers.''(Young v. Facebook Original Complaint )'', (N.D. Ca. 2010). Young's mother and sister were both fighting breast cancer at the time and Young created two pages to promote cancer awareness. She quickly amassed over 4,000 friends by sending friend invites to others supportive of the cancer cause and by receiving requests from strangers who were interested in and concerned about her cancer patient support efforts. Young then came across a page praying for the death of U.S. President Barack Obama, and she spoke out against the page. She was then subjected to "hatred, violence, discrimination, threats, pornography, kkk, violence and personal attacks ." In conjunction with her public opposition of the hate page and her allegedly "spammy" activity, her profile was disabled.Young then traveled from Maryland to Facebook's headquarters in California and sought reactivation of her account. In testimony, she stated that she did not receive "human interaction" with a Facebook account representative at Facebook's offices, and had to provide a written message to a receptionist for forwarding to an unknown recipient. She filled out a complaint form and was not allowed to speak with a Facebook account representative. Later, she received Facebook email stating her account was reactivated, but she was not provided any opportunity to discuss her account details so she traveled back to Maryland. Shortly thereafter, Young again found her account disabled. According to Facebook, Young had engaged in activity that violated Facebook's statement of rights and responsibilities, although Young states she did nothing to prompt the second disabling of her account''(Motion to Dismiss by Facebook )''. which resulted in permanent termination of her account. Young then drove back to California to file a lawsuit in the Northern District of California.」の詳細全文を読む 'Young v. Facebook, Inc.'', 790 F. Supp. 2d 1110, is a ''pro se'' internet law case in which the plaintiff sued the social network Facebook following the termination of her user account. In her original complaint, the plaintiff, Karen Beth Young, alleged violation of her First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, negligence, and fraud. In the U.S. District Court of Northern California, Facebook moved to dismiss the claim, and on October 25, 2010, presiding Judge Jeremy Fogel granted the motion to dismiss with leave to amend.(''Young v. Facebook, Inc.'' ), No. 5:10-cv-03579-JF/PVT (N.D. Cal. 2010). Redirecting her complaint, Young alleged violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act and related state laws on disability, as well as breach of contract and negligence. Again, Facebook moved to dismiss, and Judge Fogel dismissed the case without leave to amend.==Facts==Karen Beth Young of Maryland created an account on Facebook in February 2010 in order to connect with friends, family, and strangers.''(Young v. Facebook Original Complaint )'', (N.D. Ca. 2010). Young's mother and sister were both fighting breast cancer at the time and Young created two pages to promote cancer awareness. She quickly amassed over 4,000 friends by sending friend invites to others supportive of the cancer cause and by receiving requests from strangers who were interested in and concerned about her cancer patient support efforts. Young then came across a page praying for the death of U.S. President Barack Obama, and she spoke out against the page. She was then subjected to "hatred, violence, discrimination, threats, pornography, kkk, violence and personal attacks ." In conjunction with her public opposition of the hate page and her allegedly "spammy" activity, her profile was disabled.Young then traveled from Maryland to Facebook's headquarters in California and sought reactivation of her account. In testimony, she stated that she did not receive "human interaction" with a Facebook account representative at Facebook's offices, and had to provide a written message to a receptionist for forwarding to an unknown recipient. She filled out a complaint form and was not allowed to speak with a Facebook account representative. Later, she received Facebook email stating her account was reactivated, but she was not provided any opportunity to discuss her account details so she traveled back to Maryland. Shortly thereafter, Young again found her account disabled. According to Facebook, Young had engaged in activity that violated Facebook's statement of rights and responsibilities, although Young states she did nothing to prompt the second disabling of her account''(Motion to Dismiss by Facebook )''. which resulted in permanent termination of her account. Young then drove back to California to file a lawsuit in the Northern District of California.">ウィキペディアで「'''''Young v. Facebook, Inc.''''', 790 F. Supp. 2d 1110, is a ''pro se'' internet law case in which the plaintiff sued the social network Facebook following the termination of her user account. In her original complaint, the plaintiff, Karen Beth Young, alleged violation of her First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, negligence, and fraud. In the U.S. District Court of Northern California, Facebook moved to dismiss the claim, and on October 25, 2010, presiding Judge Jeremy Fogel granted the motion to dismiss with leave to amend.(''Young v. Facebook, Inc.'' ), No. 5:10-cv-03579-JF/PVT (N.D. Cal. 2010). Redirecting her complaint, Young alleged violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act and related state laws on disability, as well as breach of contract and negligence. Again, Facebook moved to dismiss, and Judge Fogel dismissed the case without leave to amend.==Facts==Karen Beth Young of Maryland created an account on Facebook in February 2010 in order to connect with friends, family, and strangers.''(Young v. Facebook Original Complaint )'', (N.D. Ca. 2010). Young's mother and sister were both fighting breast cancer at the time and Young created two pages to promote cancer awareness. She quickly amassed over 4,000 friends by sending friend invites to others supportive of the cancer cause and by receiving requests from strangers who were interested in and concerned about her cancer patient support efforts. Young then came across a page praying for the death of U.S. President Barack Obama, and she spoke out against the page. She was then subjected to "hatred, violence, discrimination, threats, pornography, kkk, violence and personal attacks ." In conjunction with her public opposition of the hate page and her allegedly "spammy" activity, her profile was disabled.Young then traveled from Maryland to Facebook's headquarters in California and sought reactivation of her account. In testimony, she stated that she did not receive "human interaction" with a Facebook account representative at Facebook's offices, and had to provide a written message to a receptionist for forwarding to an unknown recipient. She filled out a complaint form and was not allowed to speak with a Facebook account representative. Later, she received Facebook email stating her account was reactivated, but she was not provided any opportunity to discuss her account details so she traveled back to Maryland. Shortly thereafter, Young again found her account disabled. According to Facebook, Young had engaged in activity that violated Facebook's statement of rights and responsibilities, although Young states she did nothing to prompt the second disabling of her account''(Motion to Dismiss by Facebook )''. which resulted in permanent termination of her account. Young then drove back to California to file a lawsuit in the Northern District of California.」の詳細全文を読む ', 790 F. Supp. 2d 1110, is a ''pro se'' internet law case in which the plaintiff sued the social network Facebook following the termination of her user account. In her original complaint, the plaintiff, Karen Beth Young, alleged violation of her First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, negligence, and fraud. In the U.S. District Court of Northern California, Facebook moved to dismiss the claim, and on October 25, 2010, presiding Judge Jeremy Fogel granted the motion to dismiss with leave to amend.(''Young v. Facebook, Inc.'' ), No. 5:10-cv-03579-JF/PVT (N.D. Cal. 2010). Redirecting her complaint, Young alleged violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act and related state laws on disability, as well as breach of contract and negligence. Again, Facebook moved to dismiss, and Judge Fogel dismissed the case without leave to amend.==Facts==Karen Beth Young of Maryland created an account on Facebook in February 2010 in order to connect with friends, family, and strangers.''(Young v. Facebook Original Complaint )'', (N.D. Ca. 2010). Young's mother and sister were both fighting breast cancer at the time and Young created two pages to promote cancer awareness. She quickly amassed over 4,000 friends by sending friend invites to others supportive of the cancer cause and by receiving requests from strangers who were interested in and concerned about her cancer patient support efforts. Young then came across a page praying for the death of U.S. President Barack Obama, and she spoke out against the page. She was then subjected to "hatred, violence, discrimination, threats, pornography, kkk, violence and personal attacks ." In conjunction with her public opposition of the hate page and her allegedly "spammy" activity, her profile was disabled.Young then traveled from Maryland to Facebook's headquarters in California and sought reactivation of her account. In testimony, she stated that she did not receive "human interaction" with a Facebook account representative at Facebook's offices, and had to provide a written message to a receptionist for forwarding to an unknown recipient. She filled out a complaint form and was not allowed to speak with a Facebook account representative. Later, she received Facebook email stating her account was reactivated, but she was not provided any opportunity to discuss her account details so she traveled back to Maryland. Shortly thereafter, Young again found her account disabled. According to Facebook, Young had engaged in activity that violated Facebook's statement of rights and responsibilities, although Young states she did nothing to prompt the second disabling of her account''(Motion to Dismiss by Facebook )''. which resulted in permanent termination of her account. Young then drove back to California to file a lawsuit in the Northern District of California.">ウィキペディアで「''Young v. Facebook, Inc.''''', 790 F. Supp. 2d 1110, is a ''pro se'' internet law case in which the plaintiff sued the social network Facebook following the termination of her user account. In her original complaint, the plaintiff, Karen Beth Young, alleged violation of her First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, negligence, and fraud. In the U.S. District Court of Northern California, Facebook moved to dismiss the claim, and on October 25, 2010, presiding Judge Jeremy Fogel granted the motion to dismiss with leave to amend.(''Young v. Facebook, Inc.'' ), No. 5:10-cv-03579-JF/PVT (N.D. Cal. 2010). Redirecting her complaint, Young alleged violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act and related state laws on disability, as well as breach of contract and negligence. Again, Facebook moved to dismiss, and Judge Fogel dismissed the case without leave to amend.==Facts==Karen Beth Young of Maryland created an account on Facebook in February 2010 in order to connect with friends, family, and strangers.''(Young v. Facebook Original Complaint )'', (N.D. Ca. 2010). Young's mother and sister were both fighting breast cancer at the time and Young created two pages to promote cancer awareness. She quickly amassed over 4,000 friends by sending friend invites to others supportive of the cancer cause and by receiving requests from strangers who were interested in and concerned about her cancer patient support efforts. Young then came across a page praying for the death of U.S. President Barack Obama, and she spoke out against the page. She was then subjected to "hatred, violence, discrimination, threats, pornography, kkk, violence and personal attacks ." In conjunction with her public opposition of the hate page and her allegedly "spammy" activity, her profile was disabled.Young then traveled from Maryland to Facebook's headquarters in California and sought reactivation of her account. In testimony, she stated that she did not receive "human interaction" with a Facebook account representative at Facebook's offices, and had to provide a written message to a receptionist for forwarding to an unknown recipient. She filled out a complaint form and was not allowed to speak with a Facebook account representative. Later, she received Facebook email stating her account was reactivated, but she was not provided any opportunity to discuss her account details so she traveled back to Maryland. Shortly thereafter, Young again found her account disabled. According to Facebook, Young had engaged in activity that violated Facebook's statement of rights and responsibilities, although Young states she did nothing to prompt the second disabling of her account''(Motion to Dismiss by Facebook )''. which resulted in permanent termination of her account. Young then drove back to California to file a lawsuit in the Northern District of California.」の詳細全文を読む 'Young v. Facebook, Inc.'', 790 F. Supp. 2d 1110, is a ''pro se'' internet law case in which the plaintiff sued the social network Facebook following the termination of her user account. In her original complaint, the plaintiff, Karen Beth Young, alleged violation of her First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, negligence, and fraud. In the U.S. District Court of Northern California, Facebook moved to dismiss the claim, and on October 25, 2010, presiding Judge Jeremy Fogel granted the motion to dismiss with leave to amend.(''Young v. Facebook, Inc.'' ), No. 5:10-cv-03579-JF/PVT (N.D. Cal. 2010). Redirecting her complaint, Young alleged violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act and related state laws on disability, as well as breach of contract and negligence. Again, Facebook moved to dismiss, and Judge Fogel dismissed the case without leave to amend.==Facts==Karen Beth Young of Maryland created an account on Facebook in February 2010 in order to connect with friends, family, and strangers.''(Young v. Facebook Original Complaint )'', (N.D. Ca. 2010). Young's mother and sister were both fighting breast cancer at the time and Young created two pages to promote cancer awareness. She quickly amassed over 4,000 friends by sending friend invites to others supportive of the cancer cause and by receiving requests from strangers who were interested in and concerned about her cancer patient support efforts. Young then came across a page praying for the death of U.S. President Barack Obama, and she spoke out against the page. She was then subjected to "hatred, violence, discrimination, threats, pornography, kkk, violence and personal attacks ." In conjunction with her public opposition of the hate page and her allegedly "spammy" activity, her profile was disabled.Young then traveled from Maryland to Facebook's headquarters in California and sought reactivation of her account. In testimony, she stated that she did not receive "human interaction" with a Facebook account representative at Facebook's offices, and had to provide a written message to a receptionist for forwarding to an unknown recipient. She filled out a complaint form and was not allowed to speak with a Facebook account representative. Later, she received Facebook email stating her account was reactivated, but she was not provided any opportunity to discuss her account details so she traveled back to Maryland. Shortly thereafter, Young again found her account disabled. According to Facebook, Young had engaged in activity that violated Facebook's statement of rights and responsibilities, although Young states she did nothing to prompt the second disabling of her account''(Motion to Dismiss by Facebook )''. which resulted in permanent termination of her account. Young then drove back to California to file a lawsuit in the Northern District of California.」の詳細全文を読む ', 790 F. Supp. 2d 1110, is a ''pro se'' internet law case in which the plaintiff sued the social network Facebook following the termination of her user account. In her original complaint, the plaintiff, Karen Beth Young, alleged violation of her First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, negligence, and fraud. In the U.S. District Court of Northern California, Facebook moved to dismiss the claim, and on October 25, 2010, presiding Judge Jeremy Fogel granted the motion to dismiss with leave to amend.(''Young v. Facebook, Inc.'' ), No. 5:10-cv-03579-JF/PVT (N.D. Cal. 2010). Redirecting her complaint, Young alleged violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act and related state laws on disability, as well as breach of contract and negligence. Again, Facebook moved to dismiss, and Judge Fogel dismissed the case without leave to amend.==Facts==Karen Beth Young of Maryland created an account on Facebook in February 2010 in order to connect with friends, family, and strangers.''(Young v. Facebook Original Complaint )'', (N.D. Ca. 2010). Young's mother and sister were both fighting breast cancer at the time and Young created two pages to promote cancer awareness. She quickly amassed over 4,000 friends by sending friend invites to others supportive of the cancer cause and by receiving requests from strangers who were interested in and concerned about her cancer patient support efforts. Young then came across a page praying for the death of U.S. President Barack Obama, and she spoke out against the page. She was then subjected to "hatred, violence, discrimination, threats, pornography, kkk, violence and personal attacks ." In conjunction with her public opposition of the hate page and her allegedly "spammy" activity, her profile was disabled.Young then traveled from Maryland to Facebook's headquarters in California and sought reactivation of her account. In testimony, she stated that she did not receive "human interaction" with a Facebook account representative at Facebook's offices, and had to provide a written message to a receptionist for forwarding to an unknown recipient. She filled out a complaint form and was not allowed to speak with a Facebook account representative. Later, she received Facebook email stating her account was reactivated, but she was not provided any opportunity to discuss her account details so she traveled back to Maryland. Shortly thereafter, Young again found her account disabled. According to Facebook, Young had engaged in activity that violated Facebook's statement of rights and responsibilities, although Young states she did nothing to prompt the second disabling of her account''(Motion to Dismiss by Facebook )''. which resulted in permanent termination of her account. Young then drove back to California to file a lawsuit in the Northern District of California.」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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