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Publisher Agrees To Settle in E-Books Price-Fixing Suit
The holdout publisher in the Justice Department's e-books price-fixing case agreed to a settlement with the government February 8, setting the stage for a showdown between Apple Inc. and federal prosecutors later this year.The Churn: Lateral Moves in The Am Law 200
A federal prosecutor in Texas joins Haynes and Boone; Greenberg Traurig adds a lawyer on each coast; and Epstein Becker & Green nabs a labor and employment specialist from Proskauer Rose. The Churn is constant. Please send all announcements and news releases to [email protected].Government Panel Proposes Royalties for Web Music
In the latest step in the struggle to determine the price of music in the Information Age, a government panel proposed Wednesday that organizations that broadcast music and other radio content over the Internet pay royalties based on each Web user that listens in. The U.S. Copyright Office panel issued its recommendations after hearing seven months of testimony from more than 50 witnesses.Prisoner Not Guaranteed Right to Advise Other Inmates
Prison inmates have no constitutional right to give legal advice to fellow inmates, said the Supreme Court Wednesday. The fact that a communication between prison inmates contains legal advice does not give it special free-speech protection, a unanimous court ruled in the case of a Montana inmate. "Inmate law clerks are sometimes a menace to prison discipline," wrote Justice Clarence Thomas.View more book results for the query "*"
The Expert Witness in Condemnation and Tax Certiorari Cases
In his Condemnation and Tax Certiorari column, Michael Rikon, a partner of Goldstein, Rikon, Rikon & Houghton, discusses what experts beyond a real estate appraiser might be necessary, what to look for when choosing an expert, and the rules on written appraisals or other expert reports.Arrival Star Inc. v. The Descartes Systems Group Inc.
Summary Judgment, Sanctions Denied In Action Alleging Infringement on PatentsSeventh Circuit revives class action against NCAA
The 7th Circuit revived a seemingly quixotic class action by potential ticket buyers who claim the NCAA is running an illegal lottery for basketball tournament tickets.Trending Stories
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