Scott Graham focuses on intellectual property and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. He writes ALM's Skilled in the Art IP briefing. Contact him at [email protected].
May 05, 2021 | The Recorder
Pfizer, BioNTech Lose Early Bid to Toss COVID Vaccine Patent SuitThe drugmakers had argued that their alleged use of a patented fluorescent protein to identify COVID-19 antibodies is protected by a safe harbor provision that covers the FDA approval process. Troutman Pepper lawyers persuaded U.S. District Judge Marilyn Huff that the safe harbor provision should not apply, at least not at this early stage of litigation.
By Scott Graham
3 minute read
May 03, 2021 | National Law Journal
Supreme Court Asks SG's Views on Patent Eligibility—AgainFor the third time in three years, the Supreme Court is asking the solicitor general whether it's time to revisit Section 101 of the Patent Act, this time in an automotive engineering case. Eligibility is one of the most controversial areas of patent law.
By Scott Graham
4 minute read
April 30, 2021 | Law.com
Skilled in the Art: IDEA Act Gets (Some) Bipartisan Support + Sen. Leahy Would Like a PTO Director Who Follows the Law + Pfizer and BioNTech Seek Immunity From Vaccine SuitThe Senate—maybe—can come together for Senator Hirono's IDEA Act.
By Scott Graham
9 minute read
April 28, 2021 | National Law Journal
Should IP Rights Be Suspended for COVID Vaccines? A Q&A With University of Houston's Sapna KumarThough she considers herself "far from a pharmaceutical industry apologist," Kumar sees a few reasons to be skeptical of the broad waiver that India, South Africa and other countries are seeking from the WTO's TRIPS agreement.
By Scott Graham
10 minute read
April 26, 2021 | Texas Lawyer
Kirkland Saves Network Security Client From Potential Patent RuinPartners Adam Alper and Michael De Vries represented APCON Inc. against a larger competitor that was seeking to shut down the company. Rather than pursue delays, APCON went to trial quickly and ended up invalidating all of Gigamon Inc.'s asserted patents.
By Scott Graham
3 minute read
April 23, 2021 | Law.com
Skilled in the Art: Intel Regains Some Mojo in Waco + The Senate IP Subcommittee and the IDEA Act Are Back + Breaking Down Google v. Oracle With Berkeley LawIntel escapes its second trial in Waco, while unveiling its attack on the first trial's $2 billion verdict.
By Scott Graham
11 minute read
April 23, 2021 | The Recorder
Is the Supreme Court's Latest Fair Use Decision Really About Copyrightability?Google's Supreme Court advocate and amici curiae on both sides analyzed the meta-reasoning in Google v. Oracle at a Berkeley Center for Law and Technology webinar.
By Scott Graham
4 minute read
April 21, 2021 | Texas Lawyer
Intel Escapes Second VLSI Trial With Zero DamagesVLSI was seeking nearly $3 billion on top of the $2.175 billion verdict it won earlier this year. But this time a jury found that Intel did not infringe the VLSI patents, handing a win to Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr.
By Scott Graham
3 minute read
April 21, 2021 | National Law Journal
Supreme Court May Be Stuck With Patent Doctrine It Never DevelopedThe justices sounded disinclined Wednesday to throw out the doctrine of assignor estoppel. But there seemed to be no shortage of ideas for modifying it.
By Scott Graham
6 minute read
April 20, 2021 | Texas Lawyer
VLSI Drops Its Latest Patent Demand Against Intel to a Mere $2.8 BillionEven $800 million might be appropriate, Irell's Morgan Chu suggested during closing arguments in the latest case brought by Fortress Investment-backed VLSI Technology. Wilmer partner William Lee said VLSI should recover nothing, and that Chu was trying to distract jurors by calling his witnesses liars.
By Scott Graham
5 minute read
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