By Scott Graham | October 23, 2019
The decision aligns the judge with the Patent Trial and Appeal Board, and likely spells the end of a retired professor's suit against the ride-hailing company.
By Scott Graham | October 21, 2019
The patent lawyer is the eighth partner to leave the premium boutique in the last two months for firms with global reach.
By Dan Packel | October 21, 2019
FisherBroyles leaders said the firm's lack of overhead expenses allows it to deliver fixed-fee rates on par with the small IP shops that are also partnering with Amazon.
By Scott Graham | October 18, 2019
A copyright dispute over a Dr. Seuss-Star Trek mash-up is generating intense amicus interest at the Ninth Circuit.
The Recorder | Analysis|Expert Opinion
By Seth Sproul and Tucker Terhufen | October 18, 2019
California trade secret law, through California Code of Civil Procedure §2019.210, presents a statutory framework unique among state and federal trade secret laws that requires trade secret plaintiffs to identify the misappropriated trade secrets before discovery commences. Part 1 of this article examines the genesis, purpose, and a leading case interpreting §2019.210. This part reviews two additional cases that interpret §2019.210 and discuss its applications.
By Christine Simmons | Xiumei Dong | Ben Hancock | October 15, 2019
Law.com obtained data breach reports from more than 100 law firms—searchable here—but cybersecurity experts warn that far more firms are falling victim.
By Scott Graham | October 14, 2019
Princeps Interface Technologies LLC sued the tech goliaths in Delaware earlier this summer, asserting a single patent on a universal keyboard developed by inventor Timothy Higginson.
The Recorder | Analysis|Expert Opinion
By Seth Sproul and Tucker Terhufen | October 11, 2019
California trade secret law, through California Code of Civil Procedure §2019.210, presents a statutory framework unique among state and federal trade secret laws that requires trade secret plaintiffs to identify the misappropriated trade secrets before discovery commences. This article examines the genesis, purpose, and leading cases interpreting §2019.210.
By Ross Todd | October 8, 2019
New York photographer Jose Alvarado has sued Mother Jones over its use of a copyrighted photo he took of now-Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez prior to her upset win in the New York Democratic primary last year.
The Recorder | Analysis|Expert Opinion
By Vijay K. Toke and Richard Kirkpatrick | October 8, 2019
While the Supreme Court's recent decision of a trademark case involving the First Amendment was within its usual scope, a new one to be decided in the Supreme Court's new term is not. The question for decision involves money.
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