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Patent Infringement: When Does the Damages Period Begin?
Based on new statutes and revisions to established statutes, patent infringement damages may be awarded for periods prior to the sale of the accused product as well as prior to the issuance of the patent covering the accused product. These changes have implications for damages consultants, counsel and their clients involved in patent litigation.The Careerist: Screaming Bosses Are Out of Style
Are law firms now less tolerant of screaming, abusive partners?Wells Fargo Report Offers More Bad News for Large Firms
Among the troubling trends detected in the latest survey of the financial state of the legal industry's upper echelon: More firms than usual are relying on debt to fund operations late in the year.View more book results for the query "*"
Paul Hastings Finally Setting Up Shop in Silicon Valley
Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker is set to open shop in Palo Alto, Calif., within weeks, becoming the last of the big Los Angeles players to arrive in Silicon Valley. The firm is moving L.A. corporate partner Thomas Wisialowski to chair the new office and has so far recruited Ronald Lemieux, an IP litigator from Squire, Sanders & Dempsey's Palo Alto office. Seth Zachary, chairman of Paul Hastings, said the firm has an office large enough for 30 lawyers, with options for future expansion.Management guru 'Doe' wins partial victory over Regents
By Alyson M. Palmer, Staff Reporter"John Doe" is suing Georgia's Board of Regents over allegations that it breached a contract to give him the deanship of Georgia Tech's management school in 1997.The Court of Appeals of Georgia ruled March 29 that Doe had a contract with the Board of Regents, but the question of whether the board breached the contract should go to a jury-a partial victory for the plaintiff.$6.6 Million Awarded in Camp Drowning Case
A Philadelphia jury has awarded more than $6.6 million to the estate of an 8-year-old boy who drowned during his first swimming class at a summer camp after both lifeguards on duty abandoned their posts. Named as defendants were two nonprofit companies: the owner of the camp and a Philadelphia company hired to manage the camp and its employees. The jury decided that both defendants were negligent, but that the camp should bear 90 percent of the responsibility.Trending Stories
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The Hidden Cost of Bad Reviews: Why Law Firms & Attorneys Can't Afford a Damaged Online Reputation
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