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Judgment Day for California Plaintiffs Bar?
Arnold Schwarzenegger, California's new governor-elect, started assembling his transition team and lawyers in the state started to parse how his administration will likely approach issues involving the courts and litigation.U.S. high court fails to make mark in dilution case
Raymond Kurz, Celine Jimenez Crowson, and Anna KurianIn 1995, Congress passed the Federal Trademark Dilution Act. And ever since, courts have struggled to determine what elements are required to prove a federal dilution claim. There was much anticipation leading up to the Supreme Court's March 4 opinion in Moseley v. V Secret Catalogue.Rogers Fills Administrative Posts
Though new Chief Justice Chase T. Rogers has yet to say who she wants to be her top administrator, she has quickly elevated two female jurists to high-level administrative posts.In Marvel Superhero War, Paul Hastings Wins Dismissal of Stan Lee Media Derivative Suit
If the litigation over rights to the superheroes Stan Lee created at Marvel Entertainment were a comic book, Marvel counsel David Fleischer of Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker would be wearing tights and a cape.View more book results for the query "*"
Panel Says Public Has Right To Inspect Court Dockets
Companies Surpass Goal for Spending With Women- and Minority-Owned Firms
It seemed ambitious at the time: Eleven major corporations pledged to spend $30M with women- and minority-owned law firms in 2010 as part of a program. It turns out that the goal wasn't ambitious enough ...Change in Tune Needs Copyright
Plaintiffs trying to claim copyright infringement on a derivative work had better make sure the later work is separately registered with the U.S. Copyright Office, because registration of the underlying work will not carry forward, the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Aug. 30. A composer who rewrote a copyrighted song for a disc jockey friend had sued the DJ's radio station for using the song for other purposes.Start the Clock: Fed Courts Can Keep Going for 2 Weeks After a Shutdown
Greenberg should take a lesson from GE's Immelt
The world is full of victims of American International Group Inc.'s bad judgment, whether they know it or not. AIG's push to market ever more exotic securities with ever decreasing attention to risk helped accelerate the economic tailspin felt around the world. For victims, count U.S. taxpayers, now propping up the collapsed insurance giant with a $150 billion package and another $30 billion sitting in the wings.Trending Stories
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Strong & Hanni Solves Storage Woes--Learn How You Can, Too
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Meeting the Requirements of California's SB 553: Workplace Violence Prevention
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The Benefits of Outsourcing Beneficial Ownership Information Filing
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The Top 10 AI Use Cases in Private Equity
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