Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Ellen Bardash | September 21, 2020
The complaint alleges Maxar Technologies Inc. and 13 individual defendants' failure to promptly inform the public of hugely inflated accounts and a major deal falling through in 2018 qualifies as a securities law violation.
Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Ellen Bardash | September 18, 2020
Tech giant Koninklijke Philips NV and its subsidiary, Philips North America LLC, rolled out eight federal intellectual property cases Thursday, each claiming another tech company has been selling products that infringe on Philips' digital video-related patents.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | September 17, 2020
The attorney for a warehouse worker told the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, in a case likely to determine whether Pennsylvania employees should be compensated for time spent going through on-site security screenings, that even if they wait in line for just a few minutes a day, it should still be compensated under the Pennsylvania Minimum Wage Act.
By Amanda Bronstad | September 17, 2020
An escalating rift between two groups of lawyers, one led by Katrina Carroll of Carlson Lynch and the other by Ekwan Rhow of Bird Marella, could unravel a confidential class action settlement that TikTok plans to file next month in court.
By Gina Passarella Cipriani | September 16, 2020
Gates' name carried on at K&L Gates even though he retired from practicing law nearly a decade before Preston Gates & Ellis merged with Kirkpatrick & Lockhart in 2007.
By Dan Packel | September 15, 2020
Like the rest of the details of the arrangement, the firm representing Oracle is shrouded in mystery. But the proceeding before the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. is just another example of how high profile this work has become in the Trump era.
By Amanda Bronstad | September 10, 2020
Clearview AI, which uses facial recognition technology to provide photographic information to law enforcement, is asking the JPML to coordinate nearly a dozen privacy class actions after lawyers failed to consolidate them before judges in New York and Illinois, home to the strictest biometrics law in the country.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | September 10, 2020
The justices are scheduled to open their fall argument session Sept. 15 with 14 cases set to be heard over three days. The session, which ordinarily would have been heard in Philadelphia, is set to be livestreamed over YouTube, marking the second time the justices will hold an argument session using videoconferencing technology.
By Karen Sloan | September 2, 2020
It's unclear whether the software vendor tasked with delivering an online bar exam to more than 30,000 people in October can handle the load, the Association for Software Testing said.
By Alaina Lancaster | September 2, 2020
The court turned back Judge William Alsup's summary judgement order in favor of Apple, because it contradicted the California Supreme Court's order finding that the tech company must pay its store employees for time spent waiting for their bags to be checked.
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