0 results for 'McKool Smith'
Who Got the Work?℠: Big Law Advises on $26B Realty Company Purchase and More
Welcome to "Who Got the Work?℠," a regular column that highlights the law firms and lawyers around the country who are being brought in to handle key cases and close major deals for their clients.New Sheriff in Town: Vidal Will Personally Review Challenges to Patents Worth $2.175 Billion
For the first time, a PTO director will review a preliminary decision of the Patent Trial and Appeal Board to hold a trial under the America Invents Act. The move could help fortify a massive jury verdict awarded last year against Intel.As Tech Giants Push for IP Reform, Plaintiffs Firms See New Momentum for Litigation
Historically hard-pressed to afford lengthy battles with Big Tech, smaller companies—and plaintiffs firms—are seeing glimmers of hope through litigation funding and friendlier juries.As Tech Giants Push for IP Reform, Plaintiffs Firms See New Momentum for Patent Litigation
Many of these have been brought in the Eastern District of Texas, which continues to be a patent litigation hotspot with the District of Delaware coming in as the second most popular IP litigation venue. But overall, "cases have been spread across the U.S.," according to Jacobs.Plaintiffs Firms See New Momentum for Patent Litigation As Tech Giants Push for IP Reform
Many of these have been brought in the Eastern District of Texas, which continues to be a patent litigation hotspot with the District of Delaware coming in as the second most popular IP litigation venue. But overall, "cases have been spread across the U.S.," according to Jacobs.View more book results for the query "McKool Smith"
Once-Mighty E-Commerce Patent Is Ruled Ineligible
Eolas v. Amazon.com is descended from one of the most famous patent trials in Internet history. Judge Jon Tigar ruled that Eolas Technologies left too much of the "how" out of its distributed computing claims.In Win for Amazon, Google and Walmart, Once-Mighty E-Commerce Patent Is Ruled Ineligible
The judge relied in part on decisions from three other district judges—Jeffrey White of Oakland, Marsha Pechman of Washington and Sue Robinson of Delaware—that found similar distributed computing patents abstract. "While the cases are not controlling, the Court finds them to be apt and instructive," Tigar wrote.Trending Stories
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