NEXT
Search Results

0 results for 'Lathrop Gage'

You can use to get even better search results
October 31, 2009 | National Law Journal

The future of the meeting will be televised

Last spring, DLA Piper became the first law firm to purchase Cisco Systems Inc.'s TelePresence, one of a growing number of cutting-edge videoconferencing systems designed to replicate the feeling of in-person meetings through state-of-the art cameras, screens, lighting and audio. The relatively high cost means that some industries — including law firms� — have been slow to buy in.
8 minute read
May 07, 2008 | Law.com

Kilpatrick Stockton Scores $304 Million Verdict for Adidas

Lawyers at Kilpatrick Stockton scored a $304 million victory for shoe company Adidas AG late Monday in what the law firm says could be the largest trademark verdict in U.S. history. Adidas sued retailer Payless ShoeSource Inc. in 2001 in federal court in Oregon for selling imitation footwear that looked like Adidas' three-stripe shoes. Following a 15-day trial, a nine-person jury took two days to decide that Payless had violated Adidas' trademarks.
2 minute read
November 10, 2009 | Corporate Counsel

Will Meetings of the Future Be Televised?

Law firms have been reluctant to upgrade their videoconferencing systems due to high costs and poor audio and video quality. Now telepresence conferencing, designed to replicate in-person meetings through state-of-the art technology, has law firms pulling up their chairs to the screen.
8 minute read
May 06, 2008 | Law.com

Kilpatrick Scores $304 Million Verdict for Adidas

Lawyers at Kilpatrick Stockton scored a $304 million victory for shoe company Adidas AG late on May 6 in what the law firm says could be the largest trademark verdict in U.S. history.
2 minute read
November 09, 2009 | The Legal Intelligencer

The Future of the Meeting Will Be Televised

Gregory Gallo has been spending less time at the airport lately. Instead of hopping on a plane for important meetings, the DLA Piper partner ducks into a high-tech conference room in the firm's East Palo Alto, Calif., office for a face-to-face with colleagues and clients hundreds or thousands of miles away.
8 minute read
October 06, 2009 | National Law Journal

Denver midsize firm, among others, believes now is the time to expand

Denver-based Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck announced this week that it will open a new office in Reno. In some respects, Brownstein is representative of the relatively small number of firms still expanding in the United States right now: midsize and based outside of major financial centers such as New York and Chicago.
4 minute read
March 01, 2010 | The American Lawyer

Diversity Scorecard 2010 Methodology

2 minute read
April 29, 2008 | New York Law Journal

Supreme Court Upholds Strict Voter ID Law

3 minute read
February 25, 2010 | The Recorder

Circuit Sides With Crocs in Patent Fight

The Federal Circuit finds that competitors are infringing on the popular hole-filled clogs, after all. Happy news for California attorney James Otteson, a Crocs lawyer (and consumer).
3 minute read
September 21, 2009 | National Law Journal

Hallmark seeks rehearing of dispute over Paris Hilton card

A panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit ruled on Aug. 31 that a greeting card bearing Hilton's image and "that's hot" catchphrase constituted free speech and that Hilton is indeed "a topic of widespread, public interest," but that the hotel heiress still could argue that the card misappropriated her likeness. On Sept. 18, Hallmark asked the en banc 9th Circuit to reverse that conclusion.
4 minute read

Resources