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April 16, 2025
Lindell Claims 'I'm In Ruins,' Can't Pay Smartmatic Sanctions
MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell told a D.C. federal judge that he has "no money" to pay the $56,369 in sanctions he was ordered to for filing third-party counterclaims against election systems company Smartmatic, saying Wednesday that he is "in ruins."
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April 16, 2025
Ohio's 'Breathtakingly Blunt' Social Media Age Limit Law Axed
Ohio's law requiring social media companies to obtain parental consent before allowing a child under the age of 16 to make an account has been struck down after a federal judge said the legislation "fails to pass constitutional muster and is constitutionally infirm."
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April 16, 2025
Ex-Twitter Worker Can't Add Claims To Age Bias Suit
A former Twitter employee leading a conditionally certified collective action on behalf of his fellow workers aged 50 and older who were fired after Elon Musk took over the company cannot amend the complaint to add new claims, a California federal judge ruled Tuesday.
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April 16, 2025
9th Circ. Won't Revive Ex-Beach Boy Guitarist's Royalty Fight
The Ninth Circuit refused to reinstate a former Beach Boys guitarist's suit that sought to revoke his royalty agreements with Universal Music Group since they were based on physical record sales and didn't contemplate the evolution of digital streaming, ruling Wednesday the contracts only paid for physical record sale royalties.
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April 16, 2025
Musk Rips Calif. AG Decision To Not Join Suit Against OpenAI
Elon Musk blasted a California attorney general's office decision declining to join his federal lawsuit against OpenAI, saying in a Tuesday filing the decision appears to "misapprehend" the complaint and its derivative claims and "mischaracterizes or misunderstands" the consortium of investors he's assembled to bid on OpenAI Inc.'s assets.
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April 16, 2025
Former McCarter & English Atty Fights Bid To Toss Firing Suit
A former McCarter & English LLP attorney and Navy SEAL has accused the firm in New Jersey state court of trying to "smear" him by claiming he was fired for his offensive social media posts rather than his advocacy for veterans.
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April 16, 2025
X Corp. On The Hook For $105M In Video IP Row, Jury Finds
X Corp. will have to cough up $105 million after a Dallas jury found Wednesday that it infringed a startup company's video sharing technology, awarding significantly less than the $632 million that the patent owner VidStream LLC had sought.
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April 16, 2025
Napster Owner Infinite Reality Adds AI Power With $500M Deal
Gibson Dunn-advised Infinite Reality said Wednesday it will acquire AI firm Touchcast for $500 million, as the company seeks more AI power to deepen user engagement across a growing digital platform portfolio that includes a rebooted Napster.
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April 16, 2025
Mintz Atty Joins Prince Lobel As Sports Group Co-Chair
Prince Lobel Tye LLP has announced it hired a senior associate at Mintz as the firm's newest partner and co-chair of its growing sports and entertainment practice group.
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April 16, 2025
Google's $100M AdWords Deal Gets Initial Approval
A California federal judge said Wednesday he'll preliminarily approve Google's $100 million settlement that would resolve advertisers' long-running certified class action alleging the tech giant overcharged for advertisements through its AdWords service, saying the 14-year-old litigation was hard fought, but the settlement appears to be fair.
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April 16, 2025
Ex-US Atty Chosen To Monitor T-Mobile Merger Compliance
The U.S. Department of Justice is looking to appoint former U.S. attorney and current Kasowitz Benson Torres partner Edward McNally as the new monitoring trustee to oversee the government's settlement with T-Mobile that cleared the way for its $26 billion acquisition of Sprint.
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April 16, 2025
Dominion-Newsmax Defamation Trial Postponed
A Delaware judge postponed Wednesday a scheduled April 28 trial kickoff for a billion dollar defamation suit between Newsmax Media Inc. and Dominion Voting Systems, one day after a hearing on Newsmax's request for a delay and newly emerged schedule complications.
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April 16, 2025
Disbarred Atty Gets 2½ Years For Investment Scheme
A New Jersey federal judge sentenced a disbarred attorney to 2½ years in prison after he admitted to misleading would-be investors in his financial services company with false promises before using their money for his personal expenses.
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April 15, 2025
Zuckerberg Calls Buying Rival, Building Co. Two Sides Of 1 Coin
Meta Platforms CEO Mark Zuckerberg tried Tuesday to distance himself from internal documents describing Instagram and WhatsApp as competitive threats, pushing back on Federal Trade Commission monopolization claims by arguing in D.C. federal court that the owner of Facebook was always focused on improvements to itself and the acquisitions.
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April 15, 2025
X Corp. Should Pay $632M For Stealing Video IP, Jury Hears
X Corp. systematically copied a startup's video sharing technology while stringing it along with promises of a partnership, VidStream LLC told a Dallas jury during closing arguments Tuesday in a $632 million intellectual property suit that has spanned nearly a decade.
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April 15, 2025
Westlaw Rival Urges 3rd Circ. Intervention In AI Fair Use Case
Tech startup ROSS Intelligence has urged the Third Circuit to allow a quick appeal focusing on two key questions from a lower court decision concluding it infringed copyrighted material from Thomson Reuters' Westlaw platform to create an artificial intelligence-backed competing legal research tool.
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April 15, 2025
Meta Used Pirated Data To Evaluate Licensing, Authors Say
A group of bestselling authors accusing Meta Platforms of copyright infringement allege the tech company downloaded databases with millions of pirated books not just to train its large language models, called Llama, but also to see whether it could develop them without licensing content, according to a newly unredacted summary judgment motion.
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April 15, 2025
SpaceX Blasts GE Healthcare Effort To 'Slow Roll' Spectrum
GE Healthcare Technologies has asked the Federal Communications Commission to hold off on issuing authorizations for space launch operations in a certain slice of spectrum used by the healthcare industry, and SpaceX is steaming mad about it.
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April 15, 2025
Timing For Newsmax, Dominion Defamation Trial Still Unclear
The timing for a potential billion-dollar defamation battle in Delaware between Newsmax Media Inc. and Dominion Voting Systems that had been scheduled to begin April 28 was left in the air late Tuesday after a daylong hearing on final pretrial issues and Newsmax's calls for a delay.
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April 15, 2025
Avoid 'Prescriptive' Pole Upgrade Rules, Telecoms Say
An industry group warned the Federal Communications Commission that it would be a bad idea to impose broad new rules to expedite broadband upgrades to utility poles at a time when the FCC is looking to cut the number of telecom regulations.
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April 15, 2025
Some GoPro Cameras Infringe Patent, Calif. Judge Rules
A California federal judge has ruled that several GoPro cameras infringe a patent revived by the Federal Circuit last year but said a jury needs to hear the issue of whether other products infringe.
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April 15, 2025
Carriers Seek High Court Clarity On Universal Service
The trade group for regional and rural wireless service providers warned members Tuesday that they can't count on federal support for telecom deployment following last month's U.S. Supreme Court arguments over the federal government's program for subsidizing build-outs in high-cost and underserved areas.
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April 15, 2025
9th Circ. Rejects Ex-Netflix Exec's Bribery Appeal
The Ninth Circuit on Tuesday affirmed the bribery conviction of Netflix's former vice president of information technology, rejecting his argument that prosecutors had introduced an extra fraud theory that wasn't described in his indictment.
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April 15, 2025
Journalists, Unions Fight VOA Shutdown In DC Federal Court
A coalition of journalists, unions and a reporter advocacy group asked a D.C. federal judge not to disturb a temporary restraining order blocking the Trump administration from dismantling the agency that oversees Voice of America, arguing the district court has jurisdiction to weigh in on the case.
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April 15, 2025
How An Apple Exec's Attys Turned A Bribe Charge Into 'Vapor'
When jurors ruled this month that an Apple executive's promise to donate iPads to the local sheriff's department was not a bribe, it appeared to vindicate a defense strategy of calling no witnesses and painting the case as fundamentally flawed.
Expert Analysis
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Tracking The Slow Movement Of AI Copyright Cases
The tech community may be expecting a prompt resolution on whether products generated by artificial intelligence are a fair use of copyrighted works, but legal history shows that a response to this question — at the heart of over 30 pending cases — will take years, say attorneys at White & Case.
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How Property Insurance Coverage Shrank After The Pandemic
Insurers litigating property claims are leveraging rulings that provided relief in the COVID-19 context to reverse the former majority rule on physical loss or damage in all contexts, say attorneys at Reed Smith.
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E-Discovery Quarterly: Recent Rulings On Metadata
Several recent rulings reflect the competing considerations that arise when parties dispute the form of production for electronically stored information, underscoring that counsel must carefully consider how to produce and request reasonably usable data, say attorneys at Sidley.
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Striking A Balance Between AI Use And Attorney Well-Being
As the legal industry increasingly adopts generative artificial intelligence tools to boost efficiency, leaders must note the hidden costs of increased productivity, and work to protect attorneys’ well-being while unlocking AI’s full potential, says Ed Sohn at Factor.
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Fleetwood Facts: Art Imitating Life, Or Infringing Copyright?
A new lawsuit in New York federal court over Broadway's "Stereophonic" play tests copyright's limits, as copyright law poses significant hurdles when it comes to real-life stories, and the line between fact and fiction isn't always clear-cut, says Aaron Moss at Greenberg Glusker.
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Empathy In Mediation Offers A Soft Landing For Disputes
Experiencing a crash-landing on a recent flight underscored to me how much difference empathy makes in times of crisis or stress, including during mediation, says Eydith Kaufman at Alternative Resolution Centers.
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Series
Being An Artist Makes Me A Better Lawyer
My work as an artist has highlighted how using creativity and precision together — qualities that are equally essential in both art and law — not only improves outcomes, but also leads to more innovative and thoughtful work, says Sarah La Pearl at Segal McCambridge.
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How Judiciary Can Minimize AI Risks In Secondary Sources
Because courts’ standing orders on generative artificial intelligence and other safeguards do not address the risk of hallucinations in secondary source materials, the judiciary should consider enlisting legal publishers and database hosts to protect against AI-generated inaccuracies, say attorneys at Lankler Siffert & Wohl.
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3 Steps For Companies To Combat Task Scams
On the rise in the U.S., the task scam — when scammers offer a victim a fake work-from-home job — hurts impersonated businesses by tarnishing their name and brand, but companies have a few ways to fight back against these cons, says Chris Wlach at Huge.
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Perspectives
Protecting Survivor Privacy In High-Profile Sex Assault Cases
Multiple civil lawsuits filed against Sean "Diddy" Combs, with claims ranging from sexual assault and trafficking to violent physical beatings, provide important lessons for attorneys to take proactive measures to protect the survivor's anonymity and privacy, says Andrea Lewis at Searcy Denney.
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How Attorneys Can Break Free From Career Enmeshment
Ambitious attorneys can sometimes experience career enmeshment — when your sense of self-worth becomes unhealthily tangled up in your legal vocation — but taking the time to discover and realign with your core personal values can help you recover your identity, says Janna Koretz at Azimuth Psychological.
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Lawyers With Disabilities Are Seeking Equity, Not Pity
Attorneys living with disabilities face extra challenges — including the need for special accommodations, the fear of stigmatization and the risk of being tokenized — but if given equitable opportunities, they can still rise to the top of their field, says Kate Reder Sheikh, a former attorney and legal recruiter at Major Lindsey & Africa.
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Opinion
Judicial Committee Best Venue For Litigation Funding Rules
The Advisory Committee on Civil Rules' recent decision to consider developing a rule for litigation funding disclosure is a welcome development, ensuring that the result will be the product of a thorough, inclusive and deliberative process that appropriately balances all interests, says Stewart Ackerly at Statera Capital.
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The Strategic Advantages Of Appointing A Law Firm CEO
The impact on law firms of the recent CrowdStrike outage underscores that the business of law is no longer merely about providing supplemental support for legal practice — and helps explain why some law firms are appointing dedicated, full-time CEOs to navigate the challenges of the modern legal landscape, says Jennifer Johnson at Calibrate Strategies.
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Fed. Circ. Ruling May Signal Software Patent Landscape Shift
The Federal Circuit's recent ruling in Broadband iTV, despite similarities to past decisions, chose to rely on prior cases finding patent-ineligible claims directed to receiving and displaying information, which may undermine one of the few areas of perceived predictability in the patent eligibility landscape, say attorneys at King & Wood.