New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Marc A. Lieberstein and Robert Potter | February 22, 2022
What is the Metaverse, and is it a place where franchising should go?
By Scott Graham | February 16, 2022
Apple copied only the idea of diverse emoji, not iDiversicons' expression of that idea, the judge rules in a win for Latham & Watkins.
By Victoria Hudgins | February 2, 2022
Patent attorneys and ClearstoneIP co-founders Gabe and Jesse Sukman came out with a new solution to mitigate patent infringement risk because they saw the manual way of spreadsheets, emails and Word Docs as too inefficient.
By Rhys Dipshan | January 26, 2022
Alt Legal will close Towergate Informatics' Section 2(d) Citation Watch business and migrate existing clients, including a number of firms, to its own service.
By Scott Graham | January 7, 2022
SAS Institute v. World Programming Limited features the same issues, some of the same litigators and many of the same amici curiae as the famous Supreme Court showdown.
By Tamerlin Godley and Kiaura Clark | December 20, 2021
When and how can you display someone else's visual content on your website without running afoul of copyright law? When and how can someone else display your visual content? A recent ruling out of the Southern District of New York may upend the current paradigm.
By Jim Krev, iManage | December 15, 2021
You don't have to look far to find bad actors aiming to get their hands on privileged material and then "hold it hostage." Here's some examples of challenges law firms face around protecting IP, as well as some practical approaches they can adopt.
By Richard Assmus, Matthew Wargin, Monique Mulcare and Danielle Corn, Mayer Brown | December 8, 2021
Section 365(n) is a carve-out to the debtor's broad Bankruptcy Code power that allows a non-debtor counterparty the right to either accept the rejection of a contract/license or continue performing under the contract. Here's how licensees can use Section 365(n) to minimize the loss of the use of their intellectual property licenses in the event a licensor files for bankruptcy.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Willem Klein | November 23, 2021
Patent marking is an important step in the patent lifecycle. Setting aside inventions covered by method claims, patent marking is generally required to seek past damages from infringers; however, complex patenting portfolios make marking all patented products an intense act of bookkeeping.
By Scott Graham | November 16, 2021
After a first suit fizzled on patent eligibility, VideoShare LLC has put its infringement claims before a jury. Shore Chan's Michael Shore told jurors that Google is sending a message that it will destroy any competitor that doesn't take a license, but O'Melveny partner Luann Simmons calmly explained that Google doesn't infringe.
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