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Commercial Disparagement
An intentional tort that protects a business's economic interests rather than personal reputation by penalizing false statements about products or services that cause financial loss.
Fraud (Intentional Misrepresentation)
An intentional deception of another party to induce reliance and cause financial harm
Communications Decency Act (CDA) / Section 230
A federal statute that protects online platforms from tort liability by declaring that they are not the publishers of user-generated content.
Consumer Review Fairness Act (CRFA)
A federal law that protects consumers' rights to post honest reviews by making non-disparagement "gag clauses" in consumer contracts illegal.
Agency
A fiduciary relationship that results from the mutual manifestation of consent where one person (the agent) agrees to act on behalf of and subject to the control of another (the principal).
Employee
A worker who is paid for labor and is subject to the physical conduct and operational control of their employer.
Independent Contractor
A worker hired by an employer to do a specific job who is not controlled with respect to physical conduct or the details of work performance.
The ABC Test
The general rule under California Assembly Bill 5 used to classify independent contractors by proving the worker is free from control
Express Authority
Authority that is clearly and explicitly granted by a principal to an agent through spoken or written words.
Implied Authority
Authority not explicitly stated but reasonably necessary to carry out express authority
Apparent Authority
Authority that arises when a principal's words or conduct lead a reasonable third party to believe an agent has authorization
Authority by Ratification
Occurs when a person acts without authority but the principal later retroactively affirms the transaction or accepts its benefits.
Respondeat Superior
A legal doctrine establishing that an employer is vicariously liable for torts committed by an employee within the scope of their employment.
Nonpossessory Interests
Limited rights to use or benefit from real property owned by another without holding possession
Deed
A written instrument used to convey title of real property from a grantor to a grantee
Recording
The act of filing a deed with the county recorder's office to protect ownership and establish priority against future conflicting claims
Patent
A federal property protection given to new, useful, and non-obvious inventions that grants temporary exclusive rights for 20 years from the filing date for utility patents.
Copyright
A legal protection for original
Fair Use Doctrine
A legal limitation on copyrights that allows the unauthorized use of protected material for purposes such as education
Trade Secrets
Confidential business information holding independent economic value from not being publicly known that can last indefinitely if reasonable measures are taken to maintain secrecy.
Trademark
A distinctive identifier such as a word
Generic
A common name for a product or service category that cannot be trademarked under any circumstances.
Descriptive
A mark that directly describes a product's characteristics and can only be trademarked if it acquires a secondary meaning.
Genericide
The legal process where a trademark loses its protection because the brand name becomes the common generic term used by the public for that type of product.
Limited Liability
A legal protection for business owners where personal assets are shielded from company creditors and financial risk is limited to the amount invested.
Unlimited Liability
A financial risk structure where owners are personally responsible for all business debts
Pass-Through Taxation
A tax structure where business profits and losses flow directly to the owners' individual tax returns
Double Taxation
A tax structure where a corporation pays income tax on its profits at the entity level
General Partnership (GP)
A default business form created automatically by the conduct of two or more co-owners who share management
Limited Liability Company (LLC)
A business entity owned by members governed by an operating agreement that combines flexible management with limited liability protection.
Corporation
A formal business entity owned by shareholders who elect a board of directors to set policy and appoint officers to manage daily operations under governing bylaws.
C Corporation
A default corporation status that allows an unlimited number of shareholders and public trading but is subject to double taxation.
S Corporation
A regular corporation that elects pass-through taxation status with the IRS
Piercing the Corporate Veil
An exceptional judicial remedy where courts disregard limited liability to hold shareholders or members personally liable for company debts due to asset commingling