By Gabrielle Orum Hernandez | June 15, 2017
Panelists at Legalweek West look to demystify open source licensing for developers and attorneys.
By therecorder | The Recorder | June 14, 2017
9th Cir.; 15-16809 The court of appeals affirmed a judgment. The court held that the plaintiff failed to show that the GOOGLE trademark had become so…
By Ross Todd | June 14, 2017
The way SunTrust's in-house legal team initially responded to the Jane Doe plaintiff plays a role in the complaint.
By P.J. D'Annunzio | June 8, 2017
A tech startup that collects and analyzes public LinkedIn profiles and sells the information to companies wants a federal judge to rule it has a legal right to do so.
By Victoria Finkle | June 7, 2017
Compliance, class action defense and bankruptcy counsel are all in demand by an industry undergoing rapid change.
By Erin Mulvaney | May 29, 2017
Employee-rights lawyers are pressing a lawsuit against Facebook Inc. that alleges the social media company's advertising platform unlawfully permits businesses to promote job, credit and housing opportunities to white, wealthy users and exclude people of color or those in less affluent zip codes.
By Todd Cunningham | May 18, 2017
A federal judge's decision this week that entry fees paid to play on the fantasy horse racing website Derby Wars are wagers could be a warning signal to the booming fantasy sports industry.
By Michael Booth | May 11, 2017
Service of process by social media just got a serious vote of confidence.
By C. Ryan Barber | May 11, 2017
Months after Apple faced off with the FBI over an order to unlock an iPhone connected to the San Bernardino shooting investigation, Amazon.com Inc. was thrust center-stage in its own digital privacy debate when Arkansas prosecutors demanded data from a murder suspect's Echo device. Amazon initially objected to the demands last year, only to later grant access after the suspect consented to the release of the data. Speaking Thursday at a Consumer Federation of America conference in Washington, an in-house lawyer at Amazon stated flatly: "No, Echo is not spying on you."
By C. Ryan Barber | May 5, 2017
Jennifer Lopez, Nicole Polizzi, the "Jersey Shore" star better known as Snooki, and the former baksetball star Allen Iverson were among the celebrities the Federal Trade Commission recently sent letters to as part of the agency's push to promote clearer disclosures of business relationships in endorsement deals. The FTC in its announcement last month about the letters did not name any of the celebrities and stars who received them. The National Law Journal obtained the FTC letters through a records request.
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