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Intellectual Property
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March 11, 2024
5th Circ. Revives Dish's Bid To Take Down Arabic TV Site
The Fifth Circuit has revived Dish Network's suit against a German resident for sharing Arabic-language programming pirated from Dish after finding the defendant purposefully advertises to viewers in the United States.
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March 11, 2024
Designer Says USPTO's F-Bomb TM Refusal Is Retaliatory
An artist and clothing designer who wants to register the F-bomb as a trademark told the Federal Circuit on Monday that the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office is retaliating against him for his role in overturning a ban on immoral or scandalous marks, saying the USPTO is inventing reasons to deny his application.
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March 11, 2024
Writers Target Nvidia, Databricks In AI Copyright Litigation
Several writers have filed a pair of proposed class actions in California federal court that accuse technology-based companies of ripping off their copyright-protected works.
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March 11, 2024
Woodsford Affiliate Prevails In Fee Feud With SF Firm
An affiliate of British litigation funder Woodsford has secured a $1.8 million arbital award and $1.2 million in interest from a San Francisco law firm following the 2019 settlement of a lawsuit against Google, a Delaware federal judge confirmed Monday.
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March 11, 2024
EasyGroup Fights Tefal's Bid To Revoke Its 'Easy' TMs
EasyGroup has hit back at Tefal's claim that its trademarks are invalid and therefore cannot be infringed in an ongoing battle over the French cookware maker's "Easy Fry" air fryers.
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March 08, 2024
Cahill Has 'Great Ambitions' To Take IP Litigation By Storm
Cahill Gordon & Reindel LLP has spent the last year building up a new intellectual property practice, with a veteran of top law firms leading the way and attorneys from White & Case LLP joining the firm earlier this year.
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March 08, 2024
Patent Case Over Air Conditioners For Boat Use Sinks At ITC
The U.S. International Trade Commission has decided that a Swedish manufacturer of air conditioners for use on boats doesn't have a patent case against a handful of rivals based in Florida and China after all.
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March 08, 2024
Apple Settles Long-Running Patent Fight With Israeli Startup
More than six years after an Apple negotiator allegedly told an Israeli startup that "it would take years and millions of dollars in litigation" before the smartphone maker would settle patent infringement accusations involving iPhone lenses, Apple has settled with the startup, now owned by rival Samsung.
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March 08, 2024
ITC Clears LKQ, Others In Car Lamp Patent Cases
The U.S. International Trade Commission has undone administrative findings that Chicago parts maker LKQ Corp. and other companies flouted federal patent law by allegedly importing certain headlights and taillights.
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March 08, 2024
New Inventors Get More Time For Patent Pilot Program
Federal patent officials are giving a yearlong extension to a program that allows smaller inventors who are filing their first patent applications to cut the line for their inventions to be reviewed.
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March 08, 2024
Fed. Circ. Argues Judge Newman's Ethics Law Challenge Fails
A D.C. federal judge must reject suspended U.S. Circuit Judge Pauline Newman's challenge to the Judicial Conduct and Disability Act, as her constitutional arguments are too limited, the Federal Circuit Judicial Council said Friday.
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March 08, 2024
$88M Final Judgment Entered In RFID Patent Case
An Oregon federal magistrate judge has determined that Adasa Inc. is owed about $88.3 million in a case where Avery Dennison was found to infringe a patent on radio frequency identification tags, while also saying Adasa was owed ongoing royalties and interest.
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March 08, 2024
EasyGroup Denies Volkswagen's IP Claims Over EV Charging Site
EasyGroup Ltd. has disputed Volkswagen's claim that a website for electric-vehicle charging stations wrongly used a VW vehicle logo, among other issues, asserting that EasyGroup wasn't responsible for the site and had filed an "easyCharging" trademark in good faith.
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March 08, 2024
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen Barclays initiate legal proceedings against top Russian private bank JSC Alfa-Bank; Lex Greensill, founder of the collapsed Greensill Capital, suing the U.K.'s Department for Business and Trade; Wikipedia's parent company hit with a libel claim; and a sports journalism teacher filing a data protection claim against Manchester United FC. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.
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March 07, 2024
Ralph Lauren Settles With Convicted Ga. Fake Polo Dealer
The parent company of fashion giant Ralph Lauren said Thursday the company has reached a settlement with a convicted seller of counterfeit apparel, ending nearly three years of litigation against the Atlanta-area clothing store owner.
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March 07, 2024
Nokia Owes Would-Be Tech Partner $23M Over Oral Deal
Nokia Solutions and Networks Oy owes telecom company Collision Communications $23 million after reneging on an oral contract to license noise-filtering technology, a New Hampshire federal jury found Wednesday.
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March 07, 2024
Caliber Says Ex-Exec's Terms With Predecessor Still Apply
Caliber Home Loans Inc. has urged a Dallas federal court to reject a former executive's bid to trim a lawsuit accusing him of raiding the company's workforce when he defected for a competitor, arguing that a contract breach claim still stands even though he worked for a predecessor when he signed the contract at issue.
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March 07, 2024
'Hatchet Wielding' Killer Has No Part In Netflix Suit, Court Told
A Kentucky man who accused Netflix of wrongfully using his image in a true-crime documentary titled "The Hatchet Wielding Hitchhiker" has asked a Texas federal judge to keep the real hatchet-wielding hitchhiker out of his lawsuit, saying the convicted murderer has nothing to do with his litigation against the streaming giant.
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March 07, 2024
IP Forecast: 2nd Circ. To Consider Whether Seltzer Is Beer
The Modelo brand will head to the Second Circuit next week to argue that a Manhattan jury erred when it found that Corona's flavored seltzer is just about the same as beer in light of a contract that the companies entered. Here's a look at that case — plus all the other major intellectual property matters on deck in the coming week.
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March 07, 2024
Penn State Suit Sets Off Debate Over Trademarks' Function
The Pennsylvania State University and sports apparel retailer Vintage Brand are locked in a legal battle that could force courts to reexamine how trademarks function in merchandise licensing and potentially make it harder to prevail on counterfeiting claims, according to attorneys.
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March 07, 2024
Nike, Others Score Win In 'Ballin' Campaign TM Suit
A Texas federal judge has officially thrown out a graphic designer's trademark infringement suit against companies like Nike Inc., agreeing with a magistrate judge's decision that found his use of the mark "ballin" was minor.
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March 07, 2024
US Soldier Charged With Selling Military Secrets To China
A U.S. Army intelligence analyst with the rank of sergeant sold an array of sensitive and classified military secrets to China in exchange for $42,000, according to a Tennessee grand jury indictment unsealed on Thursday.
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March 07, 2024
Mixed Feelings On AI At Cyberinsurance Symposium
Panelists at the Professional Liability Underwriting Society's cyber symposium in New York City on Tuesday and Wednesday were both excited and scared about generative artificial intelligence, acknowledging that it may be used in more complicated cyberattacks yet curious about the possibility the new market could bring.
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March 07, 2024
Full Fed. Circ. Denies Intel's Bid To Escape $1.5B VLSI Retrial
The Federal Circuit on Thursday stood by a panel's holding that Intel infringed a VLSI Technology computer chip patent, meaning the tech giant must face a trial to recalculate the $1.5 billion verdict originally issued by a Texas federal jury.
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March 07, 2024
Crypto Founder's Extortion Suit Fails Yet Again
The founder of a cryptocurrency token company cannot bring racketeering and trade secret claims against former consultants he alleges extorted him for millions of dollars and tried to ruin his company's reputation, an Illinois federal judge has ruled.
Expert Analysis
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Opinion
Alternative Patents Would Solve Many Inventor Woes
A fundamental reform that gives inventors the option of alternative patents tailored to the value of an invention offers a potential solution for resolving patent-system problems, says John Powers of The Powers IP Law Firm.
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Pro Bono Work Is Powerful Self-Help For Attorneys
Oct. 22-28 is Pro Bono Week, serving as a useful reminder that offering free legal help to the public can help attorneys expand their legal toolbox, forge community relationships and create human connections, despite the challenges of this kind of work, says Orlando Lopez at Culhane Meadows.
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Series
Playing In A Rock Cover Band Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Performing in a classic rock cover band has driven me to hone several skills — including focus, organization and networking — that have benefited my professional development, demonstrating that taking time to follow your muse outside of work can be a boon to your career, says Michael Gambro at Cadwalader.
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AI May Help Patent Applicants With Functional Claiming
The U.S. Supreme Court recently set what many patent practitioners consider too high a bar for functional claims, but artificial intelligence could alter functionality analysis — conferring predictability that alleviates courts' concerns that practicing the claims requires undue experimentation, say Brian Nolan and Ying-Zi Yang at Mayer Brown.
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How Executives' Deposition Standards Can Differ
The recent Trustees of Purdue University v. Wolfspeed Inc. decision granting a motion on a protective order for a high-level witness shows how courts can vary in the application of the apex doctrine and analysis under Rule 26 of the Federal Rule of Civil Procedure, say Genevieve Halpenny and John Cook at Barclay Damon.
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Series
The Pop Culture Docket: Judge Espinosa On 'Lincoln Lawyer'
The murder trials in Netflix’s “The Lincoln Lawyer” illustrate the stark contrast between the ethical high ground that fosters and maintains the criminal justice system's integrity, and the ethical abyss that can undermine it, with an important reminder for all legal practitioners, say Judge Adam Espinosa and Andrew Howard at the Colorado 2nd Judicial District Court.
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Calif. Right To Repair Law Highlights A Growing Movement
New legislation in California is a comprehensive victory for the "right to repair" movement — signaling that this push for legal reform represents a multifaceted challenge to the status quo not only on the consumer rights front, but also in the fields of copyright, software, antitrust and warranty law, says Courtney Sarnow at Culhane Meadows.
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Lessons For Biosimilar And Biologic Antitrust Litigation
Aaron Marks at Cohen Milstein considers emerging ways in which biosimilar markets differ from traditional small-molecule drug markets, and recommends how pharmaceutical antitrust litigators can account for these market dynamics in biosimilar-delay cases.
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Teach Your Witness About 'Good' And 'Bad' Testimony Words
To ensure honest and accurate testimony in trials and depositions, attorneys must take care to educate their witnesses about the problematic words opposing counsel may use, such as “always” and “must,” and the effective words they can use in response, like “potentially” and “depends,” say Steve Wood and Bill Kanasky at Courtroom Sciences.
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Practice Tips To Help Keep Patent Reissuance Options Open
The Federal Circuit's recent denial of Float'N'Grill's reissue application for a floating grill patent shows that certain best practices, including a clear description of alternative structures and a patentability search, allow for a possible widening of a future patent's scope in a broadening reissue, say attorneys at BCLP.
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Hollywood Labor Negotiations Provide AI Road Map
Sigma Khan at Henein Hutchison uses the recent Hollywood labor strikes — one of the first instances of a mass entertainment industry legal conflict where concerns over artificial intelligence's intrusion into the workspace has become a crucial issue — to analyze how litigation, legislation and contracts can aid in a landscape transformation precipitated by AI.
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Why US Should Help European Efforts To Fix SEP Licensing
The European Commission's proposed reform of standard-essential patent licensing aims to fix a fundamental problem stemming from the asymmetry and obscurity of information about SEPs, and U.S. agencies exploring regulation of foreign regimes should support and improve these efforts, say David McAdams at Duke University and David Katz at WilmerHale.
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Opinion
Newman Suspension Shows Need For Judicial Reform
The recent suspension of U.S. Circuit Judge Pauline Newman following her alleged refusal to participate in a disability inquiry reveals the need for judicial misconduct reforms to ensure that judges step down when they can no longer serve effectively, says Aliza Shatzman at The Legal Accountability Project.
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When And How Companies Should Build An AI Strategy
Once a company has decided to engage with artificial intelligence, there are myriad steps that need to be taken, beginning with the creation of an AI leadership team that has deep knowledge about the company's business risks and is highly respected by senior management, say Judith Rinearson and Corey Bieber at K&L Gates.
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Opinion
Forging A Fair Path For Standard-Essential Patents In India
The Delhi High Court's standard-essential patents decision in Intex v. Ericsson has the potential to derail important progress for India's technology industry, so Indian regulators and courts should be developing an SEP licensing ecosystem that inspires and protects innovation, say Brian Scarpelli and Priya Nair at ACT.