0 results for ''Coblentz Patch Duffy''
Obama Lines Up Support From Calif. Legal Heavyweights
As Sen. Barack Obama's presidential campaign flexes its fundraising muscles, San Francisco Bay Area corporate lawyers are doing much of the heavy lifting. Obama has already won the support of some politically active Bay Area attorneys, four of whom have each committed to raising $100,000 by the end of March. But Obama's opponents have well-connected lawyers on board, too. "One thing is clear," said Joseph Cotchett, a John Edwards supporter. "California is an ATM machine for presidential politics."Online Music Sparks Coast to Coast Ownership Battle
For a Silicon Valley Internet search engine company, a home-court advantage is worth fighting for. The closely watched copyright dispute between MP3Board and the Recording Industry Association of America has attorneys on both sides maneuvering for their desired venues. This case could determine whether linking to a Web site with copyrighted material constitutes copyright infringement.The List: New Partners in California 2007
Congratulations to the 270 lawyers in California who have made partner since July.ACLU Chimes In With Brief for Napster
The American Civil Liberties Union entered the dissonant Napster debate when it filed a brief with the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in support of the online song sharing service. The brief does not address copyright infringement, but argues that judge Marilyn Hall Patel's injunction against Napster has a chilling effect on freedom of speech -- and may help to centralize the remarkably decentralized Internet.Is Your Law Library Ready for Disaster?
A law firm library can't support attorneys following a disaster unless it's prepared ahead of time. If you don't already have a library disaster plan in place, drop everything and get to work. You can't prevent disaster but you can be ready for it and recover quickly. Read our step-by-step plan to avert catastrophe.Personalized Webcasting Spawns Copyright Feud
Internet radio stations that allow listeners to crank up the classic rock while tuning out the teeny bop are banging heads with the Recording Industry Association of America. The recording industry alleges so-called Webcasters violate copyrights by allowing listeners to customize Web station play lists. The Digital Millennium Copyright Act allows Webcasters to play copyrighted music as long as the broadcasts are not interactive.Internet Makes -- and Breaks -- Trademarks
The Internet, once hailed as the fastest way for a company to market its brand, is the fastest way to kill one, too. CMP Media found this out when it coined, publicized and then lost control over the term "Web 2.0," Internet icon Tim O'Reilly's description of the Internet in the post-dot-com era. The swiftness with which the Web 2.0 mark has joined the trademark graveyard containing once-famous brands such as Aspirin is a case study of how the Internet's reach can hurt as well as help trademark owners.Trending Stories
Law Offices of Gary Martin Hays & Associates, P.C.
(470) 294-1674
Law Offices of Mark E. Salomone
(857) 444-6468
Smith & Hassler
(713) 739-1250
Blueprint for Successful Second Request Document Review
Brought to you by Integreon
Download Now
Employee Happiness Playbook: The 3 R's for Business Success in 2024
Brought to you by Amazing Workplace, Inc.
Download Now
The Positive Impact of AI at Small Law Firms: 4 Key Insights
Brought to you by LexisNexis®
Download Now
Will Generative AIs Transform Legal Services? Defensibility and Security Must Be a Focus
Brought to you by HaystackID
Download Now