Technology

  • April 21, 2026

    Fed. Circ. Won't Stay Ramey Sanctions, $171K Fee Bill

    The Federal Circuit on Tuesday denied patent litigator William P. Ramey III's attempt to stay a California court's order that he self-report to various disciplinary authorities that he was sanctioned for practicing law without a license, as well as pay a six-figure attorney fee award, pending an appeal.

  • April 21, 2026

    3 Firms Guide $1.2B Semiconductor Equipment SPAC Deal

    U.S.-based semiconductor materials company Forge Nano said Tuesday it has agreed to combine with blank check company Archimedes Tech SPAC Partners II Co. in a deal that values Forge Nano at $1.2 billion.

  • April 21, 2026

    Calif. Privacy Agency Seeks Input On Rules Over Worker Data

    The California Privacy Protection Agency is seeking feedback on a range of topics to inform potential future regulations, including whether new rules are needed to regulate the use of employee and job applicants' personal data, and whether existing rules need to be updated to simplify potentially confusing privacy policies.

  • April 21, 2026

    Live Nation Fails In Bid For Quick Nix Of Antitrust Damages

    A New York federal court has refused to rule immediately on Live Nation's bid to strike expert testimony and set aside the damages awarded to state enforcers in the antitrust case accusing the company of monopolizing the live entertainment industry.

  • April 21, 2026

    Mass. Man Says Coinbase, Kraken Failed To Stop $500K Scam

    Cryptocurrency platforms Coinbase and Kraken failed to adequately protect a Boston man from a sophisticated "support" scam that led to the loss of $500,000, according to a lawsuit filed in Massachusetts state court on Tuesday.

  • April 20, 2026

    Zillow Asks Wash. Court To End IBM's Patent Suit

    Zillow has urged a Washington federal court to sack IMB Corp.'s lawsuit that accuses the online real estate marketplace company of infringing a user sign-on patent, saying users logging into its platforms have to take an "overt action" that is "explicitly contrary" to what the patent requires.

  • April 20, 2026

    Northwestern Escapes Event-Photos Biometric Suit, For Now

    An Illinois federal judge tossed a proposed class action alleging Northwestern University's photographers capture and collect without permission the biometrics of people attending its events and then share the sensitive data with the SpotMyPhotos platform, but will allow the plaintiff to rework his complaint to provide more detailed allegations.

  • April 20, 2026

    Stewart Works Through PTAB Denial Policy With Tech Cos.

    U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Deputy Director Coke Morgan Stewart sat down with representatives of Apple, Nokia, InterDigital and other members of the technology industry on Monday to find "common ground" on discretionary denial policy at the Patent Trial and Appeal Board.

  • April 20, 2026

    Calif. AG Says Amazon Pressured Major Brands To Fix Prices

    Amazon bullied major brands like Levi Strauss & Co. and Hanesbrands Inc. to pressure Walmart, Target Corp. and other competing retailers to increase their prices on certain products to match Amazon's prices and ensure it can maintain its profit margins, according to new details unsealed Monday in California's price-fixing suit against the e-commerce giant.

  • April 20, 2026

    Video Privacy Law Covers All Consumers, Supreme Court Told

    A Paramount Global newsletter subscriber is pushing the U.S. Supreme Court to refrain from limiting the reach of the Video Privacy Protection Act to only consumers that directly subscribe to audiovisual goods and services, arguing that such a narrow application would require a rewrite of the decades-old statute. 

  • April 20, 2026

    Google Privacy Intervention Attempt 'Too Late,' 9th Circ. Says

    The Ninth Circuit on Monday upheld a California federal judge's decision refusing to let a group of 185 Chrome users intervene in a privacy class action accusing Google of improperly collecting and misusing data from users browsing in Incognito mode, saying the proposed intervenors were "too little, too late."

  • April 20, 2026

    'It Isn't That Complicated': Judge Rips Nvidia Discovery Delays

    A California federal magistrate judge overseeing discovery in a group of writers' proposed copyright class action against Nvidia ordered the multitrillion-dollar AI chipmaker to produce basic discovery information within a month, saying "it isn't that complicated" and that she's "astonished" and "puzzled" by Nvidia's monthslong delays.

  • April 20, 2026

    Fed. Circ. Ends Anti-Suit Injunction Appeal In BMW Case

    The Federal Circuit on Monday granted BMW's motion to dismiss Onesta IP's appeal of an anti-suit injunction barring the company's lawsuit against BMW in Germany on U.S. patents, a ruling the automaker's counsel called "a complete and unambiguous victory."

  • April 20, 2026

    Union Urges Court To Back Arbitrator In DirecTV Layoff Fight

    The International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers has asked a Colorado federal judge to affirm an arbitrator's finding that DirecTV's layoffs of union-represented technicians violated a collective bargaining agreement between the two entities.

  • April 20, 2026

    Swim Training Co.'s IPO Was Pump-And-Dump, Suit Says

    Singapore swim-school operator Fitness Champs Holdings Ltd. was hit with a proposed class action accusing it of concealing a social media-driven "pump-and-dump" scheme in which stock promoters posed as financial advisers to hype the stock through online forums, destroying the company's market capitalization after the shares were dumped.

  • April 20, 2026

    Insurer Rips Hyundai's Early Exit Bid In Theft Bellwether Trial

    State Automobile Mutual Insurance Co. has told a California federal judge that a jury must hear all its claims in a bellwether trial next month as it seeks to hold Hyundai Motor America liable for allegedly selling theft-prone vehicles that heightened the risk of insurance claims.

  • April 20, 2026

    Mobile Game Co. Lied About Reliance On Skill, Jury Told

    An attorney for mobile game maker Skillz Platform Inc. told a Manhattan federal jury Monday that rival Papaya Gaming Ltd. lied to customers about their ability to win based on skill in its games, and that bots made sure users never won too much.

  • April 20, 2026

    Gov't Hopes Court Rescues FCC Fines. Here's What Amici Say

    A rare U.S. Supreme Court showdown between the Big Three wireless carriers and their regulator takes place Tuesday, when the justices will put the Federal Communications Commission's authority to issue fines under a microscope.

  • April 20, 2026

    House Votes To Re-Up National First Responder Network

    The U.S. House of Representatives voted Monday to reauthorize the First Responder Network Authority for another decade.

  • April 20, 2026

    Reddit Defends Data-Scraping Claims Against Perplexity

    Reddit Inc. is defending its case accusing Perplexity AI Inc. and three data-scraping companies of circumventing security measures to access copyrighted content in order to train the artificial intelligence startup's "answer engine."

  • April 20, 2026

    NFT Buyer Says Ex-Software Biz Orchestrated Token Rug Pull

    A purported blockchain technology platform faces proposed class action allegations it made millions off a so-called rug pull, introducing a series of nonfungible tokens and teasing a cryptocurrency offering that never materialized, then selling those tokens into the artificial market it created and abandoning the platform.

  • April 20, 2026

    Section 230 Blocks Woman's Discord Suit Over Sexual Abuse

    An Ohio federal judge on Monday threw out a woman's suit against Discord Inc. alleging the platform allowed her to be sexually abused by a known sex offender when she was a minor, finding all of her claims are blocked by Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act.

  • April 20, 2026

    Kirkland-Led Cerberus Closes $2.3B Continuation Fund

    Kirkland & Ellis LLP-advised Cerberus Capital Management on Monday announced that it closed its latest single-asset continuation vehicle after securing $2.3 billion in commitments, which will allow the private equity firm to continue to own a controlling stake in critical digital infrastructure company Subsea Communications.

  • April 20, 2026

    Netflix Eyes $3M In Fees In Suit Where Ramey Drew $95K Fine

    Netflix's attorneys at Baker Botts and Perkins Coie are asking a California federal court to order a Finnish national and his former attorney at Ramey LLP to pay $3 million in fees the streaming giant incurred in defending a patent suit.

  • April 20, 2026

    Software Co. Fired Gay Worker For Reporting Bias, Suit Says

    A company that provides school district management software discriminated against a worker because he is gay, retaliated against him after he made an initial complaint and fired him when he reported the continued mistreatment, the former employee alleged in Georgia federal court.

Expert Analysis

  • Google's Scraping Suit Asks How Far DMCA Protections Go

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    A California federal court's decision in Google v. SerpApi will spotlight a long-developing judicial split over how to apply the Digital Millennium Copyright Act’s ban on circumventing a copyright holder’s access controls, an increasingly important point in litigation over web scraping and artificial intelligence training, say attorneys at Jenner & Block.

  • Series

    Podcasting Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Podcasting has changed how I ask questions and connect with people, sharpening my ability to listen without interrupting or prejudging, and bringing me closer to what law is meant to be: a human profession grounded in understanding, judgment and trust, says Donna DiMaggio Berger at Becker.

  • Structuring Water Agreements For Data Center Development

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    For developers of artificial intelligence data centers, water use is now a threshold feasibility and financing variable amid a regulatory landscape with a state-driven push for transparency and federal push to streamline pathways for AI-related infrastructure, say attorneys at Pillsbury.

  • Patent Eligibility Bulletin: Steps To Consider As USPTO Shifts

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    Recent memoranda from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, along with some of the first patents issued under Director John Squires, indicate a recalibration of the subject matter eligibility landscape, signaling a renewed emphasis on concrete technological improvements and a potentially pro-AI stance, say attorneys at Banner Witcoff.

  • Why The NCUA's Stablecoin Moment Matters

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    The National Credit Union Administration, a historically conservative federal agency, recently proposed a detailed stablecoin licensing framework, confirming that the proposition of building a regulatory architecture within the banking industry has moved well past "whether" and firmly into "how," says Stephen Aschettino at Fox Rothschild.

  • Ill. Swipe Fee Ruling Sets Stage For A High-Stakes Appeal

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    In Illinois Bankers Association v. Raoul, an Illinois federal court upheld the state's ban on credit and debit card swipe fees on tax and tip payments, while permanently enjoining the statute's data usage limitation, but an imminent appeal could significantly influence the trajectory of state-level payments regulation, say attorneys at Latham.

  • H-1B Registration Tips For New Wage-Weighted Selection

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    Practitioners participating in this year’s H-1B visa registration, currently underway, must understand that under the new wage-weighted selection process that replaced the random lottery, the crucial first step is choosing the correct standard occupational classification, says Jimmy Lai at Lai & Turner.

  • What Cos. Must Know About Pa.'s Proposed Data Center Regs

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    Under Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro's new proposal to balance hyperscale data center infrastructure with grid stability, water resources and community transparency, businesses in the state face a strategic choice: wait for binding requirements to emerge, or proactively align projects with the standards now, say Wade Stephens and Sasha Burton at Langsam Stevens.

  • Share Repurchases Leave Cos. Susceptible To Litigation

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    Because share repurchases bring greater ownership, which typically brings greater voting power, they can have serious implications for corporate control, which can raise questions about the unpaid benefits to some shareholders and lead to securities class actions, says Amit Bubna at Bates White.

  • Resilience Planning As Nat'l Security Shifts Tech Import Policy

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    In response to a sustained reorientation of U.S. trade policy around national security considerations, businesses reliant on processed critical minerals must closely monitor diplomatic negotiations and the potential expansion of trade measures, incorporating contingency planning into procurement and long-term investment strategies, says attorney Sohan Dasgupta.

  • How The New Tariff Landscape May Unfold

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    To replace tariffs formerly imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, the administration will rely on a patchwork of statutes, potentially leading to procedural challenges and a complex tariff landscape with varying levels, durations and applicability, says Joseph Grossman-Trawick at King & Spalding.

  • What GCs Should Keep In Mind When Developing AI Addenda

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    When general counsel develop their own customer-side artificial intelligence addenda to be used as the baseline for negotiations with AI vendors, they should take care to rightsize the addenda relative to their organization's size, complexity and bargaining power, say attorneys at Polsinelli.

  • Character.AI Case Highlights Agentic AI Liability Questions

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    The recently settled litigation against Character Technologies Inc. provides an early case study for exploring salient legal issues related to agentic artificial intelligence, such as tort liability, strict liability, statutory liability and contractual liability, says Samuel Mitchells at Smith Gambrell.

  • Can Trump's AI Order Override State Insurance Rules?

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    Although a December executive order charts a course to potentially dismantle state artificial intelligence regulations applicable to virtually any industry, the effect on the insurance industry deserves special attention because under federal law, the regulation of the business of insurance is largely delegated to the states, say attorneys at Eversheds Sutherland.

  • How DOL Rule Would Preserve App-Based Contractor Work

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    The U.S. Department of Labor's proposed 2026 independent contractor rule reinforces the centrality of worker autonomy and entrepreneurial opportunity that characterize many app-based arrangements, and returns to a framework that may offer increased predictability for platforms and workers alike, say attorneys at Gibson Dunn.

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