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Technology
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January 20, 2026
Applied Materials Settles Patent Fight On Eve Of Calif. Trial
Chipmaking equipment company Applied Materials has settled its lawsuit in California federal court that sought a finding that it didn't infringe a pair of technology patents that had also been at issue in a $4 billion patent case where a jury cleared Samsung of infringement.
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January 20, 2026
Snapchat Inks Deal To Avoid 1st Social Media Bellwether Trial
Attorneys for Snapchat and the plaintiff in a bellwether trial starting next week over claims social media harms young users' mental health told a Los Angeles judge Tuesday they have reached a settlement in the plaintiff's suit, which is slated to be the first such case to go to trial.
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January 20, 2026
Copyright Office Tells Colo. Court Artist Can't Register AI Work
The U.S. Copyright Office has asked a Colorado federal court to uphold its refusal to register an award-winning artwork because it was made on an artificial intelligence platform, arguing the artist is trying to claim authorship over creative expression that Midjourney created.
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January 20, 2026
Proposed Class Action Targets Fanatics' Wager Limit Rules
A betting platform breaking multiple state laws to raise a user's self-imposed deposit limit is a clear enough violation for the user to be granted a quick lawsuit victory, a Michigan federal judge has been told.
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January 20, 2026
5th Circ. Urged Not To Transfer Google Antitrust Case
Mobile analytics software company Branch Metric urged the Fifth Circuit on Tuesday not to transfer from Texas to California its case accusing Google of monopolizing mobile device search markets, saying the case has sufficient connections to the Lone Star State.
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January 20, 2026
Netflix Revises $83B Warner Bros. Deal To All Cash
Netflix and Warner Bros. Discovery have revised their $82.7 billion merger agreement into an all-cash deal, a move that could ease shareholder concerns over the prior stock component's susceptibility to market fluctuations.
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January 20, 2026
AI Firm Countersues Legal Publisher For Breach Of Contract
Artificial intelligence startup Alexi Technologies has accused Fastcase Inc. and its owner of weaponizing the legal system after the legal research firm filed a lawsuit in November claiming the AI company breached a former business relationship.
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January 20, 2026
Catching Up With Delaware's Chancery Court
The Delaware Chancery Court wrapped up last week with a mix of deal litigation, governance fights and disclosure battles, including a proposed settlement over a contested medical device sale, a merits dismissal tied to a $2 billion biotech exit and dueling lawsuits over Paramount Skydance's pursuit of Warner Bros. Discovery.
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January 20, 2026
2 Financial Companies Unveil Plans For Total $600M IPOs
Two private equity-backed financial-focused companies launched plans for their public debuts Tuesday, disclosing to U.S. regulators plans to raise a combined $600 million between the two initial public offerings.
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January 16, 2026
Law360 Names Practice Groups Of The Year
Law360 would like to congratulate the winners of its Practice Groups of the Year awards for 2025, which honor the attorney teams behind litigation wins and significant transaction work that resonated throughout the legal industry this past year.
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January 16, 2026
Calif. Defeats Trump Admin Suit Demanding Private Voter Data
A federal judge has thrown out the U.S. Department of Justice's suit claiming that California is required to fork over statewide voter registration lists with voters' driver's license and Social Security numbers, calling the Trump administration's request "antithetical to the promise of fair and free elections."
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January 16, 2026
Amazon Fights Class Claims That Clunky HR App Broke ADA
Amazon urged a Washington federal judge on Thursday to pull the plug for good on a lawsuit from workers who claim the company violated state and federal disability law by dragging its heels on accommodations requests filed through its A to Z human resources app, saying the workers again failed to adequately plead their case.
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January 16, 2026
USAA Warns Alice Became 'Sinkhole' For Tech In $223M Case
The United Services Automobile Association has become the latest patent owner to urge the U.S. Supreme Court to review what constitutes an abstract idea not eligible for patenting after the Federal Circuit invalidated mobile check deposit patents juries had determined PNC Bank owed $223 million for infringing.
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January 16, 2026
What To Expect From USPTO's Essential Patent Group
The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's new working group aimed at promoting "robust and predictable" standard-essential patent remedies will face challenges in its goal of clarifying patent valuations, but could encourage more lawsuits and participation in standards, attorneys say.
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January 16, 2026
Google Appeals DOJ Search Win, Seeks Data-Sharing Stay
Google on Friday filed its long-awaited notice of appeal of a D.C. federal judge's decision that the tech giant is an online search monopolist, while asking to pause some remedies won by the U.S. Department of Justice that require the company to share search data with competitors.
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January 16, 2026
9th Circ. Upholds Ax Of RNC Suit Over Google Email Filtering
The Ninth Circuit on Friday refused to revive the Republican National Committee's lawsuit accusing Google of illegally sending RNC fundraising emails to Gmail users' spam folders, finding that the committee had failed to establish the type of user relationship necessary to sustain its claims.
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January 16, 2026
Stolen Google AI Info Valuable To Rivals And China, Jury Told
Federal prosecutors questioned a foreign policy expert and an MIT computer science professor Friday in the trial of an ex-Google engineer accused of stealing AI trade secrets to help China, seeking to show that artificial intelligence is a major priority for the Chinese government and that Google's technology was nonpublic and extremely valuable.
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January 16, 2026
Immigrant Visa Pause Could Test Limits Of Executive Power
The Trump administration's indefinite pause on immigrant visas for applicants from 75 countries may test the outer bounds of executive control over visa issuance and prompt court battles in a rarely litigated area of immigration law.
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January 16, 2026
Fed. Circ. Pauses BMW's Injunction Ending German IP Cases
The Federal Circuit on Friday temporarily stayed U.S. District Judge Alan Albright's injunction barring Onesta IP LLC from suing BMW in German court, shooting down BMW's attempts earlier Friday to block a stay and hold Onesta in contempt.
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January 16, 2026
Labcorp Reaches Settlement In Data Privacy Action
Labcorp has reached a settlement with internet users in a proposed class action in North Carolina federal court claiming that the clinical testing company sold users' data without their consent to Meta/Facebook and other tech giants.
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January 16, 2026
Calif. AG Orders xAI To Stop Enabling Sexualized Deepfakes
California's attorney general on Friday sent xAI a cease and desist letter demanding the artificial intelligence company immediately stop the creation and distribution of nonconsensual, sexualized deepfakes, days after U.S. senators announced they had demanded that leading tech companies disclose how they are preventing such images on their platforms.
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January 16, 2026
Calif. Resident Pleads Guilty To Shipping AI Chips To China
A Chinese national living in Southern California pled guilty Friday in Los Angeles federal court to a conspiracy charge for unlawfully exporting computer chips for artificial intelligence applications worth "tens of millions of dollars" to China.
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January 16, 2026
Squires Ends Chinese Chip Co. IPRs In Informative Order
U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Director John Squires has stopped Yangtze Memory Technologies Co.'s challenges to two Micron Technology Inc.-owned patents, saying the Chinese chipmaker did not address concerns over its precise identity.
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January 16, 2026
OpenAI, Microsoft Must Face Musk Fraud Fight In April Trial
A California federal judge denied OpenAI Inc.'s request for summary judgment on Elon Musk's claims OpenAI duped him into donating $38 million with false promises of remaining a nonprofit, while trimming some claims against Microsoft Corp. and sending the bifurcated dispute to an April jury trial.
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January 16, 2026
Localism Requirement Dooms Low-Power Station Requests
Four proposed low-power FM stations in Texas and one in Nevada can't get building permits from the Federal Communications Commission because their paperwork doesn't indicate they would be run by local organizations under federal rules, the FCC said Friday.
Expert Analysis
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Disney's OpenAI Deal Could Be Turning Point In IP Licensing
The Disney-OpenAI agreement last month is less an anomaly than an early attempt to define what licensed generative use of entertainment intellectual property looks like in practice, including how artificial intelligence user-generated content is permitted without eroding ownership and control, says Alex Locke at Meister Seelig.
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Series
Judges On AI: How Courts Can Boost Access To Justice
Arizona Court of Appeals Judge Samuel A. Thumma writes that generative artificial intelligence tools offer a profound opportunity to enhance access to justice and engender public confidence in courts’ use of technology, and judges can seize this opportunity in five key ways.
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Shopify Suit Is An Early Antitrust Test Of 'Buy Now, Pay Later'
An ongoing antitrust suit in Minnesota federal court filed by Sezzle against Shopify — one of the earliest such lawsuits focused on buy now, pay later services — could play a particularly informative role in how short-term credit offerings and the broader market develop, say attorneys at Alston & Bird.
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2025's Most Notable State AG Activity By The Numbers
State attorneys general were active in 2025, working across party lines to address federal regulatory gaps in artificial intelligence, take action on consumer protection issues, continue antitrust enforcement and announce large settlements on behalf of their citizens, say attorneys at Jenner & Block.
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Opinion
The Case For Emulating, Not Dividing, The Ninth Circuit
Champions for improved judicial administration should reject the unfounded criticisms driving recent Senate proposals to divide the Ninth Circuit and instead seek to replicate the court's unique strengths and successes, says Ninth Circuit Judge J. Clifford Wallace.
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Autonomous AI Attacks Demarcate Shift In Risk Landscape
Anthropic and OpenAI recently disclosed cyberattacks where an artificial intelligence agent was the primary attacker, illustrating immediate implications for corporate governance, contracting and security programs as companies integrate AI with their business systems, say Rahul Mukhi and Melissa Faragasso at Cleary and Brian Lichter at Stroz Friedberg.
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2025's Defining AI Securities Litigation
Three securities litigation decisions from 2025 — involving General Motors, GitLab and Tesla — offer a preview of how courts will assess artificial intelligence-related disclosures, as themes such as heightened regulatory scrutiny and risk surrounding technical claims are already taking shape for the coming year, say attorneys at Cooley.
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How Chinese Utility Models Fit Into Global IP Strategies
Recent guidelines from the China National Intellectual Property Administration put the spotlight on the value of Chinese utility models — especially for device-focused innovations — and the interplay between utility models and conventional Chinese patents, say attorneys at Foley & Lardner.
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How 11th Circ.'s Zafirov Decision Could Upend Qui Tam Cases
Oral argument before the Eleventh Circuit last month in U.S. ex rel. Zafirov v. Florida Medical Associates suggests that the court may affirm a lower court's opinion that the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act are unconstitutional — which could wreak havoc on pending and future qui tam cases, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.
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Series
Mass. Banking Brief: All The Notable Legal Updates In Q4
Among the most significant developments on the banking regulation front in Massachusetts last quarter, Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell announced her bid for reelection, and the state Division of Banks continued its fintech focus by finalizing rules implementing a new money transmitter law, say attorneys at Nutter.
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3 DC Circ. Rulings Signal Shift In Search And Seizure Doctrine
A trio of decisions from courts in the District of Columbia Circuit, including a recent order compelling prosecutors to return materials seized from James Comey’s former attorney, makes clear that continued government possession of digital evidence may implicate the Fourth Amendment, says Gregory Rosen at RJO.
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Series
Muay Thai Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Muay Thai kickboxing has taught me that in order to win, one must stick to one's game plan and adapt under pressure, just as when facing challenges by opposing counsel or judges, says Mark Schork at Feldman Shepherd.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Intentional Career-Building
A successful legal career is built through intention: understanding expectations, assessing strengths honestly and proactively seeking opportunities to grow and cultivating relationships that support your development, say Erika Drous and Hillary Mann at Morrison Foerster.
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The Video Privacy Protection Act's Future In 2026
The U.S. Supreme Court's recent denial of certiorari petitions in two Video Privacy Protection Act cases, Salazar v. National Basketball Association and Solomon v. Flipps Media, deepens a circuit split on how to apply the decades-old statute to modern technology, but the underlying interest in privacy protection hasn't changed, say attorneys at Janove.
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Series
A Day In The In-House Life: Chime GC Talks Pathfinding
On a recent Tuesday in the office, Chime's general counsel Adam Frankel shares his typical work day, tackling everything from strategically guiding product launches and testing AI tools to mastering the perfect latte and making time for extracurricular interests.