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March 09, 2010 | New York Law Journal

Active Inducement in the Post-'Grokster' World

Richard Raysman, a partner at Holland & Knight, and Peter Brown, a partner at Baker & Hostetler, discuss the theory of active inducement in copyright law, the evolution of peer-to-peer technology over the past decade, and recent U.S. and foreign legal decisions and developments impacting copyright holders, file-sharing networks and Internet service providers.
14 minute read
September 30, 2009 | The American Lawyer

The Leader Board

These are the Global 100 firms with the largest number of lawyers outside their home countries. RPL and PPP statistics are for each firm's most recent fiscal year. The "CAGR RPL" and "CAGR PPP" numbers represent each firm's compound annual growth rate in revenue per lawyer and profits per partner, respectively, over the past five years. The first number in the "Foreign Presence" column is the number of lawyers the firm has outside its home country; the second is the percentage of lawyers outside the home country. For statistics on additional firms, see americanlawyer.com.
8 minute read
December 13, 2005 | New York Law Journal

Computer Law

Richard Raysman and Peter Brown, partners at Brown Raysman Millstein Felder & Steiner, write that sales of online advertising were $9.3 billion in 2004 and, according to estimates from Jupiter Research, are expected to climb to $18.9 billion by 2010. Financially, there is much at stake in the world of online advertising, particularly the future of ads that are tied to search results, with marketers harnessing of the Internet and search engines grappling to maintain the integrity of online advertising.
10 minute read
February 25, 2013 | New York Law Journal

Stay Afloat in the New Wave of High-Frequency Trading Actions

Eliot Lauer, Jason Gottlieb and Alyssa Astiz of Curtis, Mallet-Prevost, Colt & Mosle examine some high-frequency trading strategies likely to be targeted in the coming wave of enforcement and litigation actions, and outline new defense tactics suited to high-frequency trading.
14 minute read
January 04, 2010 | National Law Journal

Cardiologists file last-ditch suit to stop cuts in Medicare reimbursement

The clock is ticking for heart specialists who have sued the federal government over pending Medicare cuts. The cuts, which will reduce reimbursements to private cardiologists by almost 40%, are scheduled to go into effect on Jan. 15. In a last-ditch effort, the American College of Cardiology is seeking to enjoin implementation of the cuts in a lawsuit filed last week in federal court in the Southern District of Florida.
3 minute read
July 26, 2006 | Law.com

Alston & Bird Snags Outsourcing Group From Pillsbury

Alston & Bird has raided two partners from Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman to establish a global sourcing practice, but rumors that Alston might open offices in London or Germany are premature, said the firm's managing partner, Ben F. Johnson III. "The global sourcing area is one that is strategically important in branding a law firm as having the most sophisticated product offerings," Johnson says. "This is not something that the majority of American law firms has any ... depth of expertise in."
3 minute read
August 01, 2004 | Law.com

Former Government Employees as Opposing Expert Witnesses

14 minute read
August 07, 2006 | National Law Journal

Learning to love the class action

No law being developed in another country comes close to offering plaintiffs the advantages provided by the U.S. class action system. As a result, U.S. courts remain the forum most favored by plaintiffs, even in cases that include foreign parties and foreign laws.
10 minute read
April 13, 2007 | Legaltech News

Reader Rebuttal: Solving a Problem on Paper

Marc Ossinsky, president of the small law firm Ossinsky & Cathcart, seeks advice on affordable options for reducing the pileup of paper in his office. David Whelan responds with a shopping list for scanning hardware and software plus practical suggestions on how to make it legal-friendly.
3 minute read
October 09, 2009 | Law.com

What a Hogan/Lovells Merger Would Mean

If Hogan & Hartson, the Washington giant, and Lovells, the most global of the leading U.K. firms, consummate their merger talks, the new entity will have a chance to remake a corner of the Big Law marketplace. It would be the first major trans-Atlantic merger of globally oriented equals; the first trans-Atlantic deal that would be built, in significant part, on the strength of its combined litigation practices; and the first deal of its sort that didn't pretend to offer entree into the New York capital markets.
4 minute read

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