By Phillip Bantz | February 16, 2022
"Yes, as a profession, we have a major PR problem. But as individual lawyers and legal departments, we can work to fix that problem—or at least to do better ourselves," stated Boston Globe Media deputy GC Heather Stevenson.
By Scott Graham | February 15, 2022
It might be infringing or diluting, but the search giant isn't literally stealing intellectual property when it auctions off trademarked names for keyword advertising, the justices rule.
By Jessica Mach | February 15, 2022
"The worlds of law and technology continue to merge," Relativity's David Horrigan said.
By Dan Packel | February 11, 2022
A special master had previously called out Facebook's legal team for "delay and lack of responsiveness" in an ongoing discovery fight in the consumer privacy class action.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Aleeza Furman | February 10, 2022
Since the job-seeker was never convicted of a felony or misdemeanor and his defiant trespassing conviction was unrelated to the work he would do as a driver, Uber had no legal right to use that conviction as a basis to deny him employment, the complaint said.
By Allison Dunn | February 10, 2022
A federal magistrate judge in Massachusetts has issued a divided ruling on whether, in a patent dispute with Fitbit, Philips North America must turn over emails sent and received by a foreign patent attorney who is not registered as an attorney-at-law.
By Trudy Knockless | February 10, 2022
Steven Rodgers, one of the top-paid legal chiefs in the Fortune 1000, will be departing the company in May.
By Scott Graham | February 9, 2022
Keker Van Nest & Peters partner Robert Van Nest said during closing arguments that if jurors agree that Nest thermostats can't "measure" the temperature, but only estimate it, "then we've resolved our dispute." Russ August & Kabat's Marc Fenster told jurors not to let Google "talk circles around you."
By Scott Graham | February 9, 2022
The 61-35 vote is one of the strongest to date for President Biden's appellate court nominees. Stark's arrival next month ensures that the court will continue to have one former district court judge among its ranks.
By Scott Graham | February 9, 2022
The Federal Circuit rules 2-1 that the San Francisco judge abused his discretion by ordering Uniloc to disclose license deals with 109 third parties. Alsup had argued that because Uniloc's power to exclude is conferred by government-issued patents, the public has a strong interest in knowing the terms and conditions involved in Uniloc's exercise of its patent rights.
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