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Atari Interactive, Inc. v. Redbubble, Inc.
Case Number:
4:18-cv-03451
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September 13, 2022
No Atty Fees For Redbubble Counsel In Atari IP Fight
A California federal judge has refused to award attorney fees to Redbubble in a suit in which it successfully defended claims that it sold merchandise with images stolen from Atari's signature games like Pong and Asteroids.
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November 04, 2021
Game Over For Atari In IP Suit Against Redbubble, Jury Says
A California federal jury delivered a total loss to Atari on Thursday in its lawsuit alleging Redbubble sold merchandise with images stolen from its signature games like Pong and Asteroids, finding the online marketplace did not infringe any of the video game maker's intellectual property.
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November 01, 2021
Redbubble's In-House Atty Defends IP Practices In Atari Trial
Redbubble's in-house counsel defended the online marketplace's IP practices in a California federal jury trial Monday, testifying that Redbubble has multiple automated and manual tools to catch copyright and trademark infringement but that Atari never indicated it "needed or wanted proactive policing" until it sued.
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October 28, 2021
Atari's IP Chief Rips Redbubble's 'Out Of Control' Infringement
Atari's licensing director testified in a copyright and trademark infringement jury trial in California federal court Thursday that Redbubble has sold hundreds of unlicensed products through its online marketplace that rip off the game maker's intellectual property rights, calling the infringement "out of control."
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October 25, 2021
Atari Lawyers Can't Play Video Games At IP Trial, Judge Says
Atari Interactive Inc.'s lawyers can't use an '80s video game console to demonstrate to a jury that print-on-demand marketplace Redbubble sold merchandise with images stolen from signature games like Pong and Asteroids, a California federal judge has ruled.
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October 21, 2021
IP Forecast: Google Lyrics Battle To Play Out At 2nd Circ.
The Second Circuit will consider next week whether copyright law preempts claims by lyrics website Genius that Google misappropriated content for the tech giant's search results. Here's a look at that case — plus all the other major intellectual property matters on deck in the coming week.