Delaware Business Court Insider
By Ellen Bardash | November 18, 2024
Two cases challenging Elon Musk’s investments in AI projects were consolidated while another shareholder suit will move toward a separate trial.
By Shari Klevens and Alanna Clair | November 18, 2024
By being aware of certain limitations, lawyers can ensure that they do not engage in behavior relating to bar grievances that could give rise to a unique bar grievance of its own.
By Alexander Lugo | November 15, 2024
The Pittsburgh-headquartered Am Law 200 firm is suing a former client after a New York real estate developer stopped responding to requests for payment.
By Ross Todd | November 15, 2024
Runners-up this week include trial teams at Patterson Belknap and Susman Godfrey.
By Aleeza Furman | November 14, 2024
“K&S is the only party who has breached the settlement agreement,” Thomas Bosworth alleged. He asked the court to award him attorney fees relating to the firm’s motion, which he claimed “was brought in bad faith and with an intent to injure Bosworth financially.”
By Emily Saul | November 14, 2024
The motion comes less than a week after the former New York City mayor was ordered to appear in court as part of efforts to collect on a $148 million defamation judgment against him, and was threatened with civil contempt.
By Rich Harper | November 14, 2024
While perhaps not as attention grabbing as those copyright cases, trade secret law—developed over decades through common law decisions and state and federal statutes—will likely be one of the key areas of law where stakeholders work to protect, or in some cases protect against, evolving AI technology.
By Charles Toutant | November 14, 2024
New Jersey's law, passed in response to the murder of a federal judge's son, allows potential plaintiffs, including judges, police and child abuse investigators, to assign their claims to others. Critics say the law meant to protect judges has created a potential windfall for plaintiffs lawyers.
By Aaron Solomon and Alisha Talati | November 13, 2024
Guthrie not only increases the threshold for establishing “concrete harm” for standing purposes, it also notes that the mere fact that a person’s ability to pursue enforcement of a statutorily guaranteed right does not automatically confer standing in other matters.
By Natalie Gordon | November 13, 2024
It is not surprising that the role of these arguments in the courtroom has been mixed. But free speech arguments are becoming more ubiquitous across a variety of case types, including defamation, employment, copyright, and criminal cases as well as in the regulation of social media platforms.
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