Delaware Business Court Insider
By Scott Graham | September 22, 2017
U.S. District Judge Leonard Stark in Delaware ruled Friday that Gilead's conduct didn't warrant enhanced damages for willful infringement in a patent fight with Merck subsidiary Idenix.
By Scott Graham | September 22, 2017
Trenton Ward became an administrative judge on the Patent Trial and Appeal Board just as it was emerging as a venue for patent validity challenges. Five years later, he's returning to private practice as a partner at Finnegan, Henderson, Farabow, Garrett & Dunner.
By Scott Graham | September 21, 2017
The decision interpreting the Supreme Court's TC Heartland ruling will be cheered by tech companies and make it harder for patent suits to stick in the Eastern District of Texas.
By Ross Todd | September 18, 2017
In the Fishiest IP dispute you're likely to see, Fish IP Law has sued Fish & Richardson seeking a ruling that its name and logo don't infringe the megafirm's registered and common law trademarks.
By Tom McParland | September 15, 2017
A federal judge in Delaware on Sept. 15 cited the district's depleted bench as a reason for transferring a patent infringement suit against Apple Inc. to California, saying the case would have put an undue burden on an already overworked court.
By Scott Graham | September 15, 2017
A ruling from U.S. District Judge Jon Tigar in San Francisco could threaten a new litigation campaign by McKool client Eolas Technologies against Amazon, Google and Wal-Mart.
By Angela Morris | September 14, 2017
The firm has donated 2,300 square feet of its 16th floor San Francisco office and partnered with a nonprofit business accelerator to launch the StartOut Growth Lab.
By therecorder | The Recorder | September 13, 2017
9th Cir.; 15-15106 The court of appeals affirmed a judgment. The court held that the transferee of a nonexclusive license in photographs did not have…
By Scott Graham | September 13, 2017
An order Wednesday from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit could release evidence against Uber in a court battle that's speeding toward trial. An Uber spokesperson said that's not the case.
By Scott Graham | September 11, 2017
PETA agreed to drop its fight to establish copyright ownership for Naruto, a crested macaque who it claims took the famous "monkey selfie."
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