By Tom McParland | March 19, 2020
All three judges participated from locations outside the courthouse, and Courtroom 1703 sat empty. Katzmann donned a jacket and tie as he presided, but did not wear his robe, he told the Law Journal.
By Victoria Hudgins | March 19, 2020
As more attorneys work remotely during an unprecedented pandemic, limited network capacity, internet speed slowdowns and other technical issues may hinder their workflow.
By Scott Graham | March 18, 2020
The appellate court says the PTO must use formal notice-and-comment rulemaking—not opinions from the Patent Trial and Appeal Board's Precedential Opinion Panel—if it wants the court to defer to its expertise.
By C. Ryan Barber | March 18, 2020
"It comes down to you have to pound, and pound and pound away. And you look for a weakness, and as soon as you find that weakness, you exploit it and pound away at it," Reed Smith's Eric Dubelier says in a wide-ranging interview, after DOJ abandoned charges against his client Concord Management and Consulting.
By Frank Ready | March 18, 2020
With many law firms working remotely due to the coronavirus, attorneys may be prime targets for hackers and phishing campaigns looking to take advantage of the disruption.
By C. Ryan Barber | March 16, 2020
"It is no longer in the best interests of justice or the country's national security to continue this prosecution," federal prosecutors in Washington told the trial judge presiding over the case against Concord Management and Consulting, accused of sowing discord in the 2016 presidential election.
By Phillip Bantz | March 16, 2020
Jung-Kyu McCann, a former attorney for Apple Inc. and Broadcom Inc. and current general counsel for data security firm Druva Inc., wrote in a blog post that "meetings or group collaboration can be daunting for many women, especially if unconscious bias is prevalent in the workplace. It can become toxic and impair the growth of a successful and healthy work culture."
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | March 13, 2020
Uber argued that, upon registering, the rider would have reached a screen that told her she was agreeing to the terms and conditions by creating an Uber account, and that the screen would have included a hyperlink to the company's arbitration policy.
By Alaina Lancaster | March 13, 2020
Uber's claim "that it is 'not a transportation company' strains credulity, given the company advertises itself as a 'transportation system,'" wrote U.S. District Judge Richard Seeborg of the Northern District of California.
By Ross Todd | March 13, 2020
U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer also ruled that he will allow plaintiffs to pursue "time sensitive" injunctive relief during tax season despite the company's indications it will seek an interlocutory appeal of his ruling on the arbitration issue.
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