By Amanda Bronstad | March 2, 2020
Apple Inc. has agreed to pay between $310 million and $500 million to settle class actions alleging that it surreptitiously slowed older iPhones with software upgrades. The deal would include potentially $25 payments to class members and $93 million in attorney fees.
By Max Iori, Douglas B. Bloom and Xinping Zhu | February 28, 2020
Over the last six years, Business Email Compromise (BEC) attacks have cost global businesses over $12.5 billion with victims not only in all 50 states, but 150 countries around the world.
By Victoria Hudgins | February 26, 2020
Recent Eleventh, Seventh and Second Circuit court rulings have some lawyers on edge regarding the possibility that a single unsolicited marketing text message is enough standing to bring a TCPA violation suit.
By Mike Scarcella | C. Ryan Barber | February 25, 2020
"The decision to disqualify an attorney in a criminal case is not made lightly," U.S. District Judge Ann Donnelly said in a ruling unsealed Tuesday in the Eastern District of New York.
By Patrick Smith | February 24, 2020
Now that a key court ruling and reworked deal terms have the mega-deal back on track, here's a look back at some of the key players and how they worked together.
By Scott Graham | February 14, 2020
Things did not go so well for the Federal Trade Commission, or the Department of Justice for that matter, at a hearing before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.
By Scott Graham | February 14, 2020
The company had brought trade secret and copyright claims against a Chinese-based competitor, accusing former Motorola employees of taking proprietary source code for the operation of digital mobile radios.
By Phillip Bantz | February 14, 2020
The U.S. government announced new criminal charges against Huawei days after the Chinese telecom giant's chief legal officer, Song Liuping, accused rival Verizon Communications Inc. of patent infringement.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Angela Turturro | February 14, 2020
After the Second Circuit's decision in 'Melito' (involving multiple text messages), the Eleventh Circuit issued a decision on standing under the TCPA in a case involving a single text message. In that case, 'Salcedo v. Hanna', the Eleventh Circuit ruled that a single text message did not afford standing to the plaintiff. In her Internet Issues/Social Media column, Shari Claire Lewis discusses the decision, concluding that at least one thing is clear: The issue of standing in text-related TCPA cases remains in flux.
By Scott Graham | February 13, 2020
Over an hourlong hearing, three judges hammered the Federal Trade Commission over its antitrust theory while suggesting Qualcomm shouldn't be penalized for succeeding.
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