First up are Brendan Hughes, Stephen Smith, Judd Lauter and Kayla Blaker of Cooley, who helped their client VideaHealth beat back a preliminary injunction bid by Overjet, a rival in the dental artificial intelligence space. Overjet sued Videa earlier this year, claiming it used its copyrighted method for annotating dental X-rays and made false statements about its product’s capabilities. But in a 31-page decision issued last week, U.S. District Judge Allison Burroughs wrote that Overjet “failed to demonstrate that the color, shape, and shades used in its Visualization Tool are copyrightable, that Videa has made materially false and misleading statements when advertising its products, or that it is likely to suffer irreparable harm.” 

Aaron Moss, Josh Geller and Emily Avazian of Greenberg Glusker Fields Claman & Machtinger secured an appellate win for Ironmace, the South Korean video game startup behind the game “Dark and Darker,” in copyright litigation brought by larger Korean game developer Nexon. The Ninth Circuit upheld a lower court decision knocking out Nexon’s claims on forum non conveniens grounds. The court found this week that Ironmace’s submission of a “counter notification” in a separate action under the notice and takedown procedures of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act didn’t preclude Ironmace from making its forum non conveniens argument.