New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Miranda D. Means and Jeanne M. Heffernan | November 29, 2019
Although the incident of Kim Kardashian West attempting to trademark the name "Kimono" was short-lived, her ill-fated trademark application raises critical questions about the relationship between trademarks and free expression. This article examines trademarks as both a means of expression and a means of limiting others' expression.
By Raychel Lean | November 20, 2019
Help! They need somebody. Not just anybody: Former members of The Beatles and their successors have hired Fort Lauderdale lawyers to sue over alleged trademark infringement.
By Angela Morris | November 12, 2019
Tyler Technologies Inc., the company that operates e-filing systems in Texas, Georgia, California, Florida and 17 other states, was sued for patent infringement by a company that's hit 17 other companies with lawsuits since 2018.
By Raychel Lean | November 12, 2019
The case over an electronic medical records system led to a complex, three-week trial involving an alleged clandestine scheme and a mysterious IP address more than 5,000 miles away.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Lewis R. Clayton and Eric Alan Stone | November 12, 2019
In their Intellectual Property Litigation column, Lewis R. Clayton and Eric Alan Stone report on 'Romag Fasteners v. Fossil', in which the U.S. Supreme Court is set to resolve a six-to-six circuit split over whether a successful trademark-infringement plaintiff may recover the defendant-infringer's own profits without showing that the defendant's false or misleading use of the trademark was willful.
By Raychel Lean | November 11, 2019
Christopher Spuches of Agentis in Coral Gables and Javier J. Rodriguez of Saul Ewing Arhnstein & Lehr in Miami handled a complex, three-week trial involving an alleged clandestine scheme and a mysterious IP address more than 5,000 miles away.
By Scott Graham | November 8, 2019
The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office argues that Booking.com is a generic mark that cannot be registered with the PTO, because it would discourage other booking services from using "booking" as part of their domain names.
By Scott Graham | November 8, 2019
Uber has worked with an AI company to come up with a mechanism for ranking patent claims based on their breadth.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Suzette Parmley | November 6, 2019
The case involved two eponymous restaurants: one opened in Philadelphia and later moved to New Jersey, and another in New York.
By Suzette Parmley | November 6, 2019
The case involved two eponymous restaurants: one opened in Philadelphia and later moved to New Jersey, and another in New York.
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