By Angela Morris | November 18, 2019
Blitzsafe Texas, based in Marshall, has filed 15 lawsuits in four years against the world's largest automakers for allegedly infringing its two patents for a device that integrates a mobile device with a car's stereo system. The company sued General Motors Co., Fiat Chrysler Automobiles and Maserati North America.
By Scott Graham | November 15, 2019
The fitness-tracking patent wars are flaring again in the run-up to Google's proposed $2.1 billion acquisition of Fitbit.
By Scott Graham | November 15, 2019
The court's involvement is sure to reignite a 50-year-old debate over how much, if any, software should be subject to copyright, and the contours of the fair use defense in the digital age.
By Catherine Wilson | November 12, 2019
Comparing a memoir and episodes in the first season, a Miami federal judge ruled the series relied on nonprotectable historical facts.
By Raychel Lean | November 11, 2019
Christopher Spuches of Agentis in Coral Gables and Javier J. Rodriguez of Saul Ewing Arhnstein & Lehr in Miami handled a complex, three-week trial involving an alleged clandestine scheme and a mysterious IP address more than 5,000 miles away.
By Scott Graham | November 8, 2019
Uber has worked with an AI company to come up with a mechanism for ranking patent claims based on their breadth.
By Angela Morris | November 8, 2019
The defendants, Locke Lord and Dallas partner Roy Hardin, did not disclose conflicts of interest, and they put their own financial interests over the client's, the petition said. If Retractable Technologies Inc. had known about the defendants' conflicts, it would have terminated the representation. Locke Lord claims the allegations are meritless.
By Raychel Lean | November 5, 2019
Chief U.S. District Judge Mark E. Walker found that the plaintiff in a copyright lawsuit over before-and-after dentistry photos had withheld important evidence in the case.
By Scott Graham | November 1, 2019
The PTAB's constitutional crisis is over, just one month after it started.
By Charles Toutant | October 31, 2019
The court "sees no reason why it should be consciously wrong today because it was unconsciously wrong yesterday," U.S. Magistrate Judge Joel Schneider of the District of New Jersey said.
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