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Intellectual Property
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Featured
The Top Patent Damages Of 2025
The largest patent verdict of the year was Apple's $634 million loss against Masimo, and juries issued eight other nine-figure verdicts in 2025 — many of which were against Samsung.
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December 23, 2025
IP Lawyer Aims To Toss Amazon's Claims Of Trademark Abuse
A U.S. intellectual property lawyer living in Japan asked a Washington federal court on Tuesday to throw out Amazon.com Inc.'s lawsuit accusing him of conspiring with a Chinese company to use his legal credentials to circumvent a U.S. Patent and Trademark Office rule requiring that foreign trademark applicants be represented by U.S. counsel.
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December 23, 2025
Justices Urged To Spurn SG's Call To Tackle 'Skinny Labels'
Amarin Pharma Inc. on Tuesday urged the U.S. Supreme Court to reject the U.S. solicitor general's call to hear a patent case involving generic drug "skinny labels," saying the dispute over the company's heart drug Vascepa deals with factual issues not suitable for high court review.
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December 23, 2025
Estate Of 1970s Cannabis Pioneer Sues Publisher Over IP Use
The family of cannabis legalization activist and author Jack Herer is seeking to wrestle back control of his IP, filing a lawsuit in California state court which claims the patriarch's name, image and likeness have been "fraudulently" taken.
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December 23, 2025
Dem Sens. Blast Idea Of Charging Value-Based Patent Fees
A group of Democratic U.S. senators has asked Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick not to move forward with a proposed overhaul of the U.S. patent fee system that reportedly would implement fees based on a patent's value, saying such changes would create a "prohibitive bar to innovation for start-ups and other small-to-mid-size businesses."
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December 23, 2025
Justices Urged To Review 'Bike+' TM Suit Against Peloton
A fitness company with a cycling app called Bike+ has urged the U.S. Supreme Court to review a Ninth Circuit decision dismissing its trademark infringement claims against Peloton, saying the appeals court erred in assessing the likelihood of confusion and should have let a jury decide the matter.
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December 23, 2025
Yankees Defend 'Iconic' Logo Against Cannabis Apparel Seller
The New York Yankees are hoping to stifle a cannabis apparel seller's effort to secure a trademark registration for his products, telling the Federal Circuit that the application was correctly denied for copying the team's "iconic" logo.
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December 23, 2025
Squires Will Review If Hydrafacial's ITC Win Should End IPR
U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Director John Squires has paused the Patent Trial and Appeal Board's review of a Hydrafacial LLC skin treatment patent to consider the effect of a related U.S. International Trade Commission decision.
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December 23, 2025
Fed. Circ. Won't Revive Claims In Internet Voice Patent
The Federal Circuit on Tuesday affirmed a Patent Trial and Appeal Board decision in a reexamination requested by Cisco Systems Inc. that claims in a widely asserted Estech Systems IP LLC patent on voice over internet protocol telephone systems are invalid.
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December 23, 2025
Gilstrap Won't Pause Patent Case, But Hints At Delaying Trial
U.S. District Judge Rodney Gilstrap on Tuesday denied a request from Apple to pause a patent infringement case brought by Optis Cellular Technology LLC to wait for the outcome of a case between the same parties in the U.K., but he set a briefing schedule that suggested the Jan. 9 trial date could be pushed back.
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December 23, 2025
The Court Cases That Defined Sports Law In 2025
From a landmark settlement that looks to reshape the future of college athletics to an eye-popping victory for a golf legend, the sports legal world was teeming with cases that commanded attorneys' attention throughout 2025.
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December 23, 2025
ITC Atty's 1st Kids' Book Imagines A Santa-Less Christmas
Michelle Klancnik, assistant general counsel at the U.S. International Trade Commission, spends her days looking into when imports should be banned for violating intellectual property rights, but outside work, she's focused on one big question: What would happen if Santa took a year off?
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December 23, 2025
Fed. Circ. Won't Let Delayed Review Doom Ford's PTAB Wins
The Patent Trial and Appeal Board was right to invalidate claims of three Massachusetts Institute of Technology fuel management patents during a challenge from Ford Motor Co., the Federal Circuit affirmed Tuesday.
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December 23, 2025
Fed. Circ. Urged To Erase Aaron Judge's TM Phrases Win
A Long Island man seeking to register trademarks for the judiciary-themed expressions "All Rise" and "Here Comes The Judge" has asked the Federal Circuit to overturn the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board's rejection of his applications, arguing it erroneously concluded that New York Yankees slugger Aaron Judge has priority over the phrases.
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December 23, 2025
Baker Botts Hires 2 New DC Partners For Enviro, IP Team
Baker Botts LLP has hired two new partners in its intellectual property and environmental safety and incident response groups, who will both be based in the firm's Washington, D.C., office, Baker Botts said in recent announcements.
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December 22, 2025
Anthropic, Google, Meta Face More Writer Copyright Claims
A group of writers, including Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist John Carreyrou, on Monday lobbed yet another copyright infringement suit at tech companies Anthropic, Google, OpenAI, Meta, xAI and Perplexity, criticizing Anthropic's $1.5 billion settlement in a similar class action as seeming to serve the companies, not creators.
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December 22, 2025
Aritzia, J. Crew, Albertsons, More Sued Over Card Reader IP
The owner of a series of patents covering credit card reader technology has filed a slew of infringement suits against retailers, including Aritzia, J. Crew and Albertsons, claiming the companies infringed the patents with their payment processing systems.
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December 22, 2025
Adeia Resolves Disney Patent Claims With Long-Term License
Adeia Technologies Inc. said Monday that it had reached a long-term intellectual property license agreement with Disney that will resolve patent claims it brought against the entertainment giant.
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December 22, 2025
Judge Again Axes MyPort's Apple Suit Under Alice
A federal judge has dismissed a patent infringement suit brought by MyPort Technologies Inc. against Apple Inc., saying the patents it was asserting described unpatentable abstract ideas.
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December 22, 2025
Apple Seeks To Overturn $634M Masimo Patent Verdict
Apple has urged a California federal judge to grant its combined motion for judgment or a new trial for its $634 million trial loss over a Masimo patient monitor patent, arguing that no reasonable jury could have reached the verdict and that the tech giant was "severely prejudiced" by erroneous court rulings.
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December 22, 2025
Authors Push For OpenAI Counsel Talks On Pirated Books
A class of authors suing OpenAI over copyright infringement claims has asked a Manhattan federal judge to leave in place a magistrate judge's order for the artificial intelligence startup to turn over its in-house attorneys' communications regarding the deletion of a set of pirated books that were allegedly used to train ChatGPT.
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December 22, 2025
Accent Translation Patent Claims Remain In Trade Secret Spat
A California federal judge has rejected a tech company's bid to dismiss patent claims from a competitor's trade secret lawsuit over accent translation technology, saying the motion was improper because it raised many of the same arguments it used in an unsuccessful attempt to dismiss other claims.
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December 22, 2025
Google Says 'Settled Expectations' Challenge Is Still Viable
Google LLC urged the Federal Circuit on Monday to pay no heed to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's arguments that failed challenges to the office's policy of denying patent reviews based on the owner's "settled expectations" should decide Google's own challenge, arguing its case is different.
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December 22, 2025
Mich. Festival Organizer Says Lions Stole Name
The producers of a Michigan music festival have gone to federal court to claim that the Detroit Lions used their slogan and logo without permission to promote a new "Motor City Muscle" football jersey design.
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December 22, 2025
Fed. Circ. Urged To Preserve Novartis' Bench Trial Loss
MSN Pharmaceuticals has pushed back against Novartis' efforts to save its case accusing the generic-drug maker of infringing a patent covering the blockbuster cardiovascular drug Entresto, telling the Federal Circuit that the appeal "reveals no district court error, just Novartis' poor litigation strategy."
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December 22, 2025
Fla. Judge Won't Block Taylor Swift In Poet's $25M IP Suit
A Florida federal judge denied a request Monday by a poet suing Taylor Swift for $25 million to block the pop superstar from allegedly infringing the poet's work in lyrics across four albums.
Editor's Picks
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Copyright Guide Or Policy Change? Project Divides IP Attys
The American Law Institute's restatements of law, widely regarded as influential reference points for judges and attorneys, are typically yearslong projects that are finished quietly and without much controversy, but one for copyright that concluded this year has diverged from that tradition.
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PTAB Judges Alarmed By Squires' Moves To Limit Their Role
With U.S. Patent and Trademark Office leadership limiting the Patent Trial and Appeal Board's oversight of patent validity disputes, current judges for the tribunal say they are distressed by the recent moves to curb their role and are looking for work elsewhere amid the instability.
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Patent Landscape Shifts As Squires Takes On Key PTAB Role
The announcement that U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Director John Squires will now make all decisions on whether to institute America Invents Act patent reviews is expected to reshape litigation, by leading fewer accused companies to file challenges, attorneys say.
Expert Analysis
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Opinion
Judges Carry Onus To Screen Expert Opinions Before Juries
Recent Second Circuit arguments in Acetaminophen Products Liability Litigation implied a low bar for judicial gatekeeping of expert testimony, but under amended Rule 702 of the Federal Rules of Evidence, judges must rigorously scrutinize expert opinions before allowing them to reach juries, says Lee Mickus at Evans Fears.
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Labubu Highlights Evolving IP Strategies In Modern Markets
Pop Mart's decision not to pursue U.S. patents for its Labubu plush dolls — relying instead on expressive rights — is rational given the nature of the product and the velocity of the market, and also underscores broader structural issues that may hold the U.S. patent system from keeping pace with modern markets, says Tina Dorr at Barnes & Thornburg.
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How Fractional GCs Can Manage Risks Of Engagement
As more organizations eliminate their in-house legal departments in favor of outsourcing legal work, fractional general counsel roles offer practitioners an engaging and flexible way to practice at a high level, but they can also present legal, ethical and operational risks that must be proactively managed, say attorneys at Boies Schiller.
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Opinion
Justices Should Clarify Loper Bright Doctrine Via Patent Case
The U.S. Supreme Court should use the Lynk Labs v. Samsung patent case to provide urgently needed guidance on how last year’s Loper Bright decision should be applied to real-world questions of agency authority in the post-Chevron world, says Timothy Hsieh at Oklahoma City University School of Law.
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7 Strategies To Optimize Impact Of Direct Examination
Direct examination is a make-or-break opportunity to build a witness’s credibility, so attorneys should adopt a few tactics — from asking so-called trust-fall questions to preemptively addressing weaknesses — to drive impact and retention with the fact-finder, says Allison Rocker at Baker McKenzie.
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Series
Nature Photography Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Nature photography reminds me to focus on what is in front of me and to slow down to achieve success, and, in embracing the value of viewing situations through different lenses, offers skills transferable to the practice of law, says Brian Willett at Saul Ewing.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Practical Problem Solving
Issue-spotting skills are well honed in law school, but practicing attorneys must also identify clients’ problems and true goals, and then be able to provide solutions, says Mary Kate Hogan at Quarles & Brady.
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Intellectual Property Challenges In AI-Driven Drug Discovery
Given the adoption of artificial intelligence-based drug discovery platforms and the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's recent guidance on determining inventorship in AI-assisted inventions, practitioners must consider unprecedented questions regarding inventorship, patentability standards and infringement liability, says Paul Calvo at Sterne Kessler.
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Software Patents May Face New Eligibility Scrutiny
November guidance from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, along with recent litigation trends from the Federal Circuit, may encourage new challenges in the USPTO and district courts to artificial intelligence and software patents that rely on generic computing functions without concrete details, say attorneys at Venable.
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Opinion
A Uniform Federal Rule Would Curb Gen AI Missteps In Court
To address the patchwork of courts’ standing orders on generative artificial intelligence, curbing abuses and relieving the burden on judges, the federal judiciary should consider amending its civil procedure rules to require litigants to certify they’ve reviewed legal filings for accuracy, say attorneys at Shook Hardy.
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Riding The Changing Winds For AI Innovations At The USPTO
As recent U.S. Patent and Trademark Office moves reshape how artificial intelligence inventions will be examined and put them on firmer eligibility footing, practitioners need to consider how this shift is both an opportunity and a challenge, say Ryan Phelan at Marshall Gerstein and attorney Mark Campagna.
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Series
The Law Firm Merger Diaries: Integrating Practice Groups
Enacting unified leadership and consistent client service standards ensures law firm practice groups connect and collaborate around shared goals, turning a law firm merger into a platform for growth rather than a period of disruption, says Brian Catlett at Fennemore Craig.
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Tapping Into Jurors' Moral Intuitions At Trial
Many jurors approach trials with foundational beliefs about fairness, harm and responsibility that shape how they view evidence and arguments, so attorneys must understand how to frame a case in a way that appeals to this type of moral reasoning, says Steve Wood at Courtroom Sciences.
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Patent Disclaimers Ruling Offers Restriction Practice Insights
The Federal Circuit's recent decision in Focus Products v. Kartri confirms that prosecution disclaimers can extend to examiner-defined species in restriction practice, making it important for patent practitioners to manage restriction requirement responses carefully to avoid unintended claim scope limitations, say attorneys at BCLP.
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Opinion
Supreme Court Term Limits Would Carry Hidden Risk
While proposals for limiting the terms of U.S. Supreme Court justices are popular, a steady stream of relatively young, highly marketable ex-justices with unique knowledge and influence entering the marketplace of law and politics could create new problems, say Michael Broyde at Emory University and Hayden Hall at the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware.