By Richard Binder | May 30, 2019
Colombian media personality Virginia Vallejo's copyright infringement suit against the Netflix show "Narcos" is going forward—and it's all thanks to a love scene with a gun.
By Richard Binder | May 30, 2019
Colombian media personality Virginia Vallejo's copyright infringement suit against the Netflix show "Narcos" is going forward — and it's all thanks to a love scene with a gun.
By Scott Graham | May 28, 2019
A handful of Houston Independent School District teachers were sued for distributing hundreds of printed study guides made by a company called DynaStudy while hiding their copyright warnings.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Sunjeev S. Sikand | May 28, 2019
On Jan. 7, the U.S. Patent Office issued further guidance on the application of 35 U.S.C. Section 112 during examination of computer-implemented functional claim limitations (112 guidance).
By Scott Graham | May 24, 2019
What's next for Qualcomm after Judge Lucy Koh rained down 233 pages of antitrust pain on the telecommunications equipment company?
By Richard Binder | May 24, 2019
The estate of Harold Arlen, the composer of "Over the Rainbow" and other classic songs, has dropped a house on the biggest tech companies in the form of a lawsuit over unauthorized recordings.
By Richard Binder | May 24, 2019
The estate of Harold Arlen, the composer of "Over the Rainbow" and other classic songs, has dropped a house on the biggest tech companies in the form of a lawsuit over unauthorized recordings.
By Erin Hennessy, Annie Allison and Logan Kotler | May 24, 2019
Copyright, Fortnite and the Ability to Protect How You Shake Your Groove Thing
The U.S. Supreme Court just crashed the copyright world's latest dance party — stepping on the toes of a soiree of copyright infringement lawsuits against videogame developer Epic Games, the creator of Fortnite.
By Richard Binder | May 24, 2019
Pepe creator Matt Furie sued Infowars in 2018 for copyright infringement over a poster the company sold on its website.
By Robert W. Clarida and Robert J. Bernstein | May 24, 2019
In Dr. Seuss Enterprises v. ComicMix, the Southern District of California granted summary judgment to defendants, affirming its prior findings that a ComicMix illustrated book combining elements of several Seuss children's books with characters, themes and other features of the popular sci-fi series Star Trek was a non-infringing fair use of the Seuss material from which it had admittedly been “slavishly” copied.
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