By Zack Needles | Karen Sloan | February 26, 2021
In this week's episode, Winston & Strawn partner Michael Tomasulo and associate DaWanna McCray join Law.com intellectual property reporter Scott Graham to talk about a high-stakes patent showdown between Fortress Investment Group and Intel Corp. in the Western District of Texas.
By Scott Graham | February 18, 2021
California-based Mad Dogg Athletics registered SPIN and SPINNING with the USPTO 25 years ago. It claims its trademarks are incontestable, no matter what Tom Cruise or Angela Bassett say.
By Dan Clark | February 3, 2021
David Cunningham, the chief information officer at Winston & Strawn, said he pulls litigation data from the firm and gives it to litigation partners early on in the process. With that data, the partners often create several avenues to approach a matter with and will bring that to the client.
By Scott Graham | January 30, 2021
"We're all learning on this remote jury approach, but I think it's worked well," Judge Thomas Zilly told the parties following a weeklong trial.
By Scott Graham | January 26, 2021
An infringement case over the once popular but now discontinued Steam video game controller pits Manatt, Phelps & Phillips against Shook, Hardy & Bacon in an all-remote format.
By Shaleen J. Patel and Mike Hobbs, Troutman Pepper | January 15, 2021
While the sound distracting you hear from this article may well be William Shakespeare rapidly turning in his grave like the Mad Hatter Teacup Ride at Disneyworld, recent legal and procedural developments associated with the ubiquitous Instagram social media site have created significant practical and legal risks for both copyright owners and account holders that would have even vexed the Bard himself.
By Scott Graham | January 14, 2021
Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr's Mark Selwyn told Judge Ed Davila on Thursday that Apple, Cisco, Google, Intel and Edwards Lifesciences are trying to "reinvigorate" the America Invents Act, while an inventor group seeking to intervene would shut it down. The inventors say they want a seat at the table when it comes to AIA rules.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Jonathan Bick | January 14, 2021
How to determine when internet distribution of content constitutes 'publication.'
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Eric Alan Stone and Catherine Nyarady | January 12, 2021
In their Intellectual Property Litigation column, Eric Alan Stone and Catherine Nyarady report on several recent cases in New York federal courts that addressed the unsettled question of whether news organizations and other publishers infringe an author's rights by embedding social media posts containing copyrighted photographs.
By Scott Graham | December 29, 2020
With two potentially seismic cases at the Supreme Court and an extra year's worth of cases ready for trial, 2021 is shaping up as a headline-making year for IP litigation.
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