Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Tom McParland | March 13, 2018
A Delaware patent infringement case has erupted into an antitrust dispute, after an India-based generic drugmaker accused Mylan Pharmaceuticals of using its lawsuit to stifle competition for its topical foam acne treatment.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Lewis R. Clayton and Eric Alan Stone | March 13, 2018
Intellectual Property Litigation columnists Lewis R. Clayton and Eric Alan Stone report on the post-'Cray' landscape and provide guidance for practitioners.
By MP McQueen | March 13, 2018
The lawsuit, filed in federal district court in Miami on behalf of the estate of David Kleiman, a paralyzed IT security expert who died in 2013, may incidentally establish whether Craig Wright is, in fact, the pseudonymous Satoshi Nakamoto, said to be the inventor of bitcoin.
Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Tom McParland | March 9, 2018
A Delaware federal judge on Thursday confirmed a $50.3 million infringement verdict against Ardagh Glass Inc. for infringing a patent held by a small Pennsylvania-based glass company.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Tom McParland | March 9, 2018
A Delaware federal judge on Thursday confirmed a $50.3 million infringement verdict against Ardagh Glass Inc. for infringing a patent held by a small Pennsylvania-based glass company.
By Scott Graham | March 9, 2018
Moving beyond the denial, anger and bargaining, what would a jury trial on patent eligibility look like?
By Scott Graham | March 7, 2018
BlackBerry Ltd., which no longer makes its own mobile phones, still holds a trove of mobile technology patents, and on Tuesday it unleashed them against the CrackBerry of the current decade: Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp.
By Scott Graham | March 6, 2018
IBM's lawsuit against its former diversity officer set off debate over whether diversity hiring efforts can be considered trade secrets. So, which company came out ahead?
By Jonathan Ringel | March 6, 2018
This contest is not about who represented the largest or most prestigious client. Nor is it necessarily about who got the biggest—or smallest—verdict.
Litigation Daily | Letter to the Editor
By Jenna Greene | March 6, 2018
Sometimes First Amendment rights to rebut and set the record straight need to be exercised by parties in litigation before a verdict in order to effectively defend reputation on a timely basis.
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