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by danielheath 876 days ago
I'd expect the legal team were employees, too.

They had to either fight the case, or figure out what team could actually sort this out and convince their manager to take a look.

In the unlikely event they managed the first of those tasks, the second would present an insurmountable hurdle.

2 comments

even when evilCorp has their own in house team of evilLawyers, they normally hire outside evilLawyers to handle the cases at trial. in house evilLawyers might not have court/trial experience, and the type of evilLawyer that likes court/trial tend to not like office evilLawyer work. also, in house evilLawyer might not be registered in the state of the trial.
> "I'd expect the legal team were employees, too."

The article actually says this:

> "Despite Facebook hiring several law firms to defend their case, Soldati, representing himself, was able to successfully argue Meta/Facebook committed a breach of contract and that they were not immune under the Communications Decency Act"

(edited out how I originally wrongly introduced this quote)