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.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | May 31, 2020
We urge the New Jersey courts to follow what appears to be a majority (and growing) position in support of relief for the possessor, and not just the owner, of the trade secret.
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.
By Rebecca Edelson | May 21, 2020
It behooves businesses to take care to protect their trade secrets during video conferencing. Here, we address some potential risks to trade secrets from video conferencing—including hidden ones—and offer some potential measures to limit them.
By Alaina Lancaster | May 20, 2020
"Not only did Lenovo do a wholesale cut-and-paste job with Khoros's public-facing code, it also reverse-engineered Khoros's Studio Tool and its proprietary back-office website architecture, APIs, and macros," according to the complaint filed Tuesday.
Corporate Counsel | Commentary
By Diana Torres, Allison Buchner and Lauren Schweitzer | May 8, 2020
Here are some best practices to ensure that trade secrets or privileged information discussed via videoconference remains protected.
Corporate Counsel | Commentary
By Diana Torres, Allison Buchner, Lauren Schweitzer and Maria Beltran | May 8, 2020
Many companies have formed intellectual-property-sharing initiatives to further the COVID-19 relief effort. These joint efforts are laudable, but they also create risks of intellectual property disputes after the crisis ends.
By Jenna Greene | April 26, 2020
The fight between WeRide and AllRide, which are competing to bring self-driving cars to the Chinese market, stands out for what U.S. District Judge Edward Davila of the Northern District of California described as a "staggering" amount of destruction of potentially discoverable material.
By Jenna Greene | April 26, 2020
The fight between WeRide and AllRide, who are competing to bring self-driving cars to the Chinese market, stands out for what U.S. District Judge Edward Davila of the Northern District of California described as a "staggering" amount of destruction of potentially discoverable material.
By Sue Reisinger | April 21, 2020
"The first way for a general counsel to use it is to validate their own choice of [outside] counsel," said Mark Klapow, a litigation partner and co-chair at Crowell & Moring in Washington, D.C. "You want someone who's been there before and really understands how to work these cases."
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