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In Streaming Video Dispute, Company Aims at Colleges, Universities
After a recent legal setback, a California company that claims its patents cover the streaming video technology used by adult Web sites is boosting efforts to collect money from colleges and universities. Acacia Media Technologies Corp. has sent letters to dozens of colleges claiming the schools' use of streaming video in areas like distance learning and video lectures violates company patents. The message: Pay up, or risk getting sued.Vigilant Insurance Co. v. M/T "Clipper Legacy"
Shipper's Liability Limited to $500 Under COGSA; 'Customary Freight Unit' Was Entire Shipment of OilBanks must fix their cavalier mistakes
For all the scandalous news about systemically sloppy foreclosure documentation, bankers are trying to reassure the public that no undeserved evictions resulted. "At the end of the day, the underlying substance was accurate," JPMorgan Chase Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon told reporters on a conference call. "There's almost no chance that we've made a mistake.Cite as: US v. Daugerdas, S3 09 Cr. 581, NYLJ 1202471731243, at *1 (SDNY, Decided September 03, 2010)U.S. District Court, Southern DistrictJudge William H. Paul
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Miami lawsuits say bank funneled money into Bernie Madoff's Ponzi
The U.S. subsidiary of the British financial giant Standard Chartered Bank International has been named as a defendant in more than a dozen lawsuits filed by Latin American investors who lost money in Bernard Madoff's record-setting Ponzi scheme.Commercial Driver Can't Keep License After DUI Conviction
In a case of first impression, a Commonwealth Court panel has reversed a common pleas court judge who ruled that ambiguity in a 2005 law allowed a man convicted of a DUI offense to maintain his commercial driver's license after losing his personal operating privileges.Race Harassment Suit Reinstated
A New York Department of Correctional Service employee who claims she was subjected to a hostile work environment because of ner race can proceed with her suit, the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled yesterday. The 2nd Circuit ruled that former employee Cynthia A. Richardson's Title VII lawsuit, challenging her treatment at the hands of fellow employees and supervisors at two correctional facilities, should be reinstated, reversing a trial court grant of summary judgment to defendants.Bacardi's sale of former headquarters preserves Miami history
Real estate observers say the city of Miami profited the most from the $10 million transaction, which preserves one of the city's most recognizable properties and doesn't add to Biscayne Boulevard's traffic.New ACC GC James A. Merklinger Touts the Value of Association
As the new general counsel for the Association of Corporate Counsel, James A. Merklinger will continue to extol the benefits of membership, albeit from a higher perch at the world's largest organization for in-house counsel.Trending Stories
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