By Scott Graham | June 24, 2020
The 2011 law has reduced the need for and cost of patent litigation, ultimately generating substantial economic benefits, says the report by economists at The Perryman Group. It was sponsored by Unified Patents, one of the most frequent petitioners for America Invents Act trials.
By Scott Graham | June 17, 2020
Fenwick & West has led the charge for Amazon since PersonalWeb Technologies sued 80 of its customers. The Federal Circuit ruled Wednesday that a previous suit against Amazon, though voluntarily dismissed, precluded many of the new claims.
By Scott Graham | June 12, 2020
As a dialogue springs up around systemic racism, lawyers like Kirkland & Ellis' Ellisen Turner and Foley & Lardner's Jeanne Gills say there's no more excuse for clients not to include black patent lawyers on their Rolodexes.
By Scott Graham | June 9, 2020
The veteran patent litigator was sworn in via a virtual ceremony Tuesday.
By Scott Graham | June 5, 2020
Virtual law firms have become popular in the 2000s, but the formation of Beeman Muchmore this week feels like something new: a virtual firm combined with a microspecialty IP practice.
By Alaina Lancaster | June 4, 2020
A federal judge in Sacramento granted a preliminary injunction brought by Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe's on behalf of ExamWorks, which will bar former employees of the medical exam provider from working with "100,000 potential customers" wrapped up in the trade secrets dispute.
By Scott Graham | June 3, 2020
Genentech is looking to block sales of Amgen's cancer biosimilar Mvasi because Amgen failed to provide 180 days' notice when it shifted manufacturing plans from California to Rhode Island. Judge Kimberly Moore said Genentech is proposing "an extraordinarily broad view" of the Biologics Price Competition and Innovation Act.
The Recorder | Analysis|Expert Opinion
By Frank N. Darras | June 1, 2020
New name-image-likeness (NIL) laws across America are a ticking time bomb for the NCAA, because NIL rights have taken center stage.
By Ross Todd | May 29, 2020
A Ninth Circuit panel found that a trial court erred by failing to route a question to the copyright office over whether known inaccuracies in Unicolor's application to register a copyright for a pattern would have led the office to refuse registration.
By Chad Shear and Teresa A. Lavoie | May 29, 2020
Putting yourself at the threshold of the other door and considering the room from that perspective can provide useful reminders of each side's strategic opportunities and concerns, and ensure that the doors to the deal are kept open.
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