June 24, 2011 | Law.com
Powers Parts Ways With Weil, Gotshal, Will Start Own FirmBy Amy Miller
3 minute read
May 25, 2011 | The Legal Intelligencer
Fed. Circuit Rules Against Tessera in Patent DisputeAn appeals court has affirmed an International Trade Commission ruling saying that Elpida Memory Inc., Acer Inc., Smart Modular Technologies Inc. and several other technology companies did not infringe on Tessera Inc.'s patents for chip packaging.
By Amy Miller
2 minute read
May 26, 2010 | Corporate Counsel
'Enormous' Bargaining Chip: Survey Shows Law Firms Charging Clients Different Rates — for the Same Work!In a not-yet-released study that shows just how 'powerful' negotiation can be, the numbers show that law firms' corporate clients are not all created equal — if billing rates are any indication.
By Amy Miller
3 minute read
April 01, 2010 | Corporate Counsel
RISE of the GCs: Next Stop for In-House Counsel? World DominationThe recession has driven a power shift that now favors in-house counsel over the firms they hire, a new report has found — and one law firm exec says, 'This will prove to be a real shakedown for the legal sector and its workings.'
By Amy Miller
3 minute read
January 01, 2010 | Corporate Counsel
Burying the HatchetIn-house lawyers helped negotiate the huge agreement between Intel and AMD.
By Amy Miller
4 minute read
July 15, 2011 | Legaltech News
Apple's Chief Patent Counsel Set to Depart at Year's EndWhen Richard "Chip" Lutton became Apple's chief patent counsel 10 years ago, the company was filing about two dozen patent applications a year. Last year, Apple applied for close to 1,500 patents to protect the iPod, iPhone, and iPad from infringers. Now the man many credit with helping build Apple's patent portfolio has confirmed his departure at year's end.
By Amy Miller
3 minute read
November 30, 2010 | Law.com
Report Sheds Light on Best Venues to File Patent SuitsBy Amy Miller
2 minute read
July 06, 2011 | Legaltech News
Zynga Taps Cooley for IPOIt's Zynga Game Network's turn to heat up the stock charts. As expected, attorneys from Cooley in Palo Alto, Calif., and San Francisco are helping the online gaming company go public in one of the most highly anticipated technology offerings this year. Zynga filed papers July 1, saying it expects to raise $1 billion in the offering -- perhaps even more.
By Amy Miller
2 minute read
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