By Ellen Bardash | March 24, 2021
Counsel, responding to an inquiry from a Chicago federal judge, clarified that the parties would be willing to notify class members of the settlement through the inbox feature in the app itself if determined to be necessary by the court.
By Scott Graham | March 24, 2021
A Goodwin Procter team led by Douglas Kline persuaded a Texas jury that Personalized Media Communications holds a patent on foundational decryption technology still in use today by many companies.
By Phillip Bantz | March 24, 2021
Rachel Barnett led the Manhattan-based clothier through a high-profile bankruptcy last year. Now, she's taking over as the top lawyer for a national U.S. stock exchange.
By Phillip Bantz | March 23, 2021
"How many in the community, myself included, have had to have difficult conversations with our parents, about their safety and strategies, to make sure they're as safe as possible?" said Lynn Whitcher, GC at San Diego-based tech and telecom firm MD7.
By Alaina Lancaster | March 22, 2021
Facebook's Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher counsel contends that adding dozens of documents leaked by a defunct bikini-photo app to the public docket in the litigation stemming from the Cambridge Analytica scandal would "reflect a misleading and one-sided narrative."
By Greg Land | March 22, 2021
The jury award included $120 million in punitive damages against two companies accused of accessing and copying software used by apartment complex managers to keep up with tenant accounts and other services.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | March 19, 2021
"You don't need a newfangled, digital society law to deal with the Bucks County case," said Anita Allen, a professor of privacy law and ethics at the University of Pennsylvania Law School. "But if we're going to live in a world where deepfaking is available to everyone, we might well need state and federal statutes that deal with deepfakes and dealing with false images or facsimiles of people."
By Michael A. Mora | March 18, 2021
Greenberg Traurig partner, Joshua R. Brown, said in certain instances some copying is unintentional and can be resolved without litigation, while in other situations there is willful intent that will require a resolution in the courts, such as in this lawsuit.
By Scott Graham | March 18, 2021
The Western District of Texas Patent Blog's Joseph Abraham and Mark Siegmund explain how Judge Alan Albright became the nation's busiest patent judge, and compare local rules and juries in the Eastern and Western Districts.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Katheryn Tucker | March 18, 2021
"As Uber would tell it, when plaintiffs filed their disability-discrimination suit in federal court, they wound themselves in a Gordian knot," Judge Cheryl Ann Krause said. "Our precedent, however, makes this case far less knotty than Uber suggests."
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