New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Jana S. Farmer and Adam Bialek | December 11, 2017
Jana S. Farmer and Adam Bialek examine, through an intellectual property lens, the current debate over the issue of confederate or other controversial monuments, specifically addressing the question: Do the creators of confederate monuments or their heirs have a say in whether these works stay or go under the Visual Artists Rights Act of 1990?
By Scott Graham | December 7, 2017
A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit peppered a lawyer for Google with tough questions over the company's fair use win over Oracle.
By Scott Graham | December 6, 2017
Thursday is Pearl Harbor Day, so what more appropriate occasion for Oracle and Google to renew hostilities over the Java API copyright?
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Emilie Pitts | November 29, 2017
You have worked as an art teacher for over 20 years. You are both meticulous in planning and a creative mastermind. Your work has led you to create a painting program exclusively for children in your classroom. The idea catches on and a summer camp in a nearby town wants to use your program in their camp curriculum. Great news! What's next?
By Colby Hamilton | November 21, 2017
According to prosecutors, the Iranian national formerly worked for the military before hacking HBO's network, and then attempting to ransom the company' shows and information for $6 million.
By Ben Hancock | November 17, 2017
Online TV streaming service FilmOn will get a chance to argue to the California Supreme Court that it has a legitimate defamation case for being labeled a copyright infringer and provider of adult content.
By Ross Todd | November 14, 2017
Irell & Manella's Robert "Bobby" Schwartz won summary judgment for CBS.
By Ross Todd | November 14, 2017
Van Nest scored a copyright defense win for Arista Networks under the “scènes à faire” doctrine.
By Ross Todd | November 14, 2017
Munger, Tolles & Olson represented movie studios that won an injunction against movie-filtering service VidAngel, which sold a technology allowing people to remove content from movies users found offensive.
By Ross Todd | November 14, 2017
Petrocelli and his team changed the tide of cases over rights to pre-1972 recordings for the entire radio broadcasting industry.
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