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Technology
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October 09, 2025
Feds Probe Tesla's 'Full Self-Driving' Over Traffic Violations
The U.S. auto safety regulator is investigating Tesla's advanced driver-assistance system known as Full Self-Driving after reports of accidents involving vehicles operating with FSD that have run red lights or crossed into opposing lanes of traffic.
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October 09, 2025
Nissan, Drivers Reach Deal To End Faulty Brake Claims
Nissan North America Inc. and drivers on Thursday reached a settlement in principle in Tennessee federal court that would end multistate claims alleging the automatic braking systems in certain Nissan vehicles would sometimes trigger and cause the cars to stop suddenly, creating an unpredictable hazard.
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October 09, 2025
Reflection AI, Backed By Nvidia, Raises $2B In Series B Round
Artificial intelligence company Reflection AI on Thursday announced that it has raised $2 billion in a Series B funding round, with media reports saying the latest round has caused the company's valuation to soar to $8 billion.
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October 09, 2025
Tort Report: Nuked 'Nuclear Verdict' Stays, Texas Justices Say
The fate of a "nuclear verdict" that was used to jump-start tort reform campaigns across the country and a settlement of a suit over a Kiss guitar technician's death lead Law360's Tort Report, which compiles recent personal injury and medical malpractice news that may have flown under the radar.
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October 09, 2025
BeFrugal Marketing Firm Says Exec Steered Clients To Rival
Affiliate marketing firm BeFrugal said in a lawsuit this week in Massachusetts state court that a senior vice president secretly co-founded a competing company, then steered major clients, including DirecTV and Samsung, to the new business.
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October 09, 2025
Q3 Notches Biggest Megadeal Quarter In Three Years
The value of global mergers and acquisitions worth $10 billion or more hit $289.5 billion in the third quarter, the highest since the second quarter of 2022, according to a report provided by S&P Global Market Intelligence on Thursday.
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October 09, 2025
Megan Thee Stallion Wins Sanctions Over Deleted Messages
A Florida magistrate judge Thursday sanctioned online personality Milagro "Mobz World" Cooper for deleting thousands of text messages and WhatsApp data after being told to preserve evidence in rapper Megan Thee Stallion's defamation and cyberstalking suit against her.
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October 09, 2025
FCC Looks To Scale Down Broadband 'Nutrition' Label Reg
The Federal Communications Commission will consider making broadband "nutrition" labels a little leaner after the agency during the Biden administration imposed what the industry sees as overly burdensome requirements.
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October 09, 2025
Kentucky AG Enters Roblox Fray, Says App Attracts Predators
The Kentucky attorney general has filed his own suit against Roblox, joining other plaintiffs alleging that the popular gaming platform fails to safeguard against adult sexual predators seeking to target and exploit minors despite assurances to parents that its platform is safe for their children.
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October 09, 2025
Fed. Circ. Backs PTAB Wins For Samsung In Earpiece Cases
The Federal Circuit on Thursday shot down appeals of a series of Patent Trial and Appeal Board decisions that found claims across three patents covering earpieces and attached microphone technology invalid.
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October 09, 2025
Mobile Game Co. To Pay $25M To End Chancery Investor Suit
A China-based mobile gaming company has agreed to pay $24.75 million to settle a Delaware Chancery Court class action accusing it of engineering a $600 million share buyback that unfairly cemented its control of the company.
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October 09, 2025
Investment Adviser Firm Sues Over Fraud Protection Patent
Investment adviser firm FinTegrity LLC has sued Deutsche Bank and a Czech cybersecurity company in Texas federal court with claims they are infringing a patent that covers fraud protection technology.
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October 09, 2025
Clearview AI's £7.5M GDPR Fine Faces Renewed Scrutiny
A London tribunal has decided that a lower court was wrong to find that the U.K.'s data protection regulator lacked the power to fine Clearview AI Inc. £7.5 million ($10 million) over its collection of images of U.K. citizens from social media without their knowledge.
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October 08, 2025
NYC Takes Social Media Youth Addiction Suit To Federal Court
New York City has withdrawn from coordinated litigation against social media companies in California and filed a largely identical suit in federal court, a move the city determined was in its "best interest" for holding the companies accountable for purposefully getting youth hooked on their addictive platforms, a spokesperson said Wednesday.
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October 08, 2025
Ex-AI Chief Says US Bank Can't Dodge Race Bias Claims
The former head of U.S. Bank's artificial intelligence efforts says he looped in the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission within the required time frame before suing the bank for discrimination, telling a North Carolina federal judge not to toss his claims.
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October 08, 2025
Retailers Lose Bid To Ax NY Algorithmic Pricing Law
A New York federal judge Wednesday tossed the National Retail Federation's lawsuit challenging a new state law that requires retailers to disclose the use of so-called algorithmic pricing, saying the retailers have not plausibly alleged that the disclosure requirement violates the First Amendment's prohibition on compelled speech.
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October 08, 2025
GoPro Owes $174M For Infringing Video Camera IP, Jury Hears
GoPro Inc. infringed Contour IP Holding LLC's patented video camera technology and should pay $174 million in damages, Contour's counsel told a California federal jury during closing trial arguments Wednesday, while GoPro's attorney countered that the action cam maker didn't infringe because it actually invented the technology first.
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October 08, 2025
Semtech Gets Suit Over Revised Sales Projections Trimmed
A California federal judge has trimmed shareholder claims against semiconductor supplier and cloud service provider Semtech Corp. in an investor suit alleging share prices for the company dropped and investors were hurt after it downgraded bullish sales expectations for a certain product portfolio it had earlier said would be used by chipmaker Nvidia.
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October 08, 2025
Meta Sued Over Financial Scam Impersonation Ads
Meta Platforms Inc. is knowingly publishing and profiting from scam advertisements that unlawfully impersonate licensed financial professionals to ensnare social media users in fraudulent investment schemes involving thinly traded China-based securities, two financial professionals allege in a proposed class action in California federal court.
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October 08, 2025
Cepton Accused By Investor Of Hiding Better Takeover Bid
Light detection and ranging technology company Cepton Inc. has been hit with a shareholder's proposed class action in California federal court, accusing it of concealing a third party's "credible" attempt to buy Cepton for more than double the amount Japan-based Koito Manufacturing Inc. paid to acquire it in January.
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October 08, 2025
Senate IP Leader Plans Push To Pass Patent Eligibility Bill
Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., the leader of the Senate's intellectual property subcommittee, said Wednesday that before he leaves Congress in just over a year, one of his primary goals will be to advance his long-gestating bill to make more inventions eligible for patents.
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October 08, 2025
Fortinet Brass Misled Investors With Rosy Outlook, Suit Says
Executives and directors of cybersecurity company Fortinet Inc. were hit Wednesday with a shareholder derivative action alleging they made the company misrepresent its revenue expectations for certain customer upgrades despite knowing that certain rosy projections were unrealistic.
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October 08, 2025
ALN Medical Strikes $4M Data Breach Deal With 1.8M Users
Healthcare advisory firm ALN Medical has offered to create a $4 million settlement fund to resolve litigation surrounding a March 2024 data breach that affected more than a million individuals, requesting a Nebraska federal court's preliminary approval of the deal.
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October 08, 2025
OpenAI Says Copyright Case Isn't About AI Outputs
OpenAI told a Manhattan federal judge Wednesday that a group of authors should not be allowed to argue that ChatGPT spits out summaries or verbatim portions of their books in a copyright infringement case, saying this is an additional theory of infringement that would make discovery more onerous than it already is.
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October 08, 2025
'I Don't Want To Be A Referee,' Google Search Judge Says
A D.C. federal judge faced the prospect Wednesday of years more involvement in the U.S. Justice Department's case against Google's search monopoly, saying during a hearing that he's trying to balance avoiding being a "referee" for his remedies decision while preventing "misuses" of data sharing and search syndication mandates.
Expert Analysis
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Beaming Up Lessons From William Shatner's Failed Patent Bid
In a tale that boldly goes where few celebrity inventors have gone before, William Shatner's unsuccessful attempt to patent a smartphone file organization system offers insights about potential pitfalls to avoid in patent applications, say attorneys at King & Spalding.
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Assessing Potential Ad Tech Remedies Ahead Of Google Trial
The Virginia federal judge tasked with prying open Google’s digital advertising monopoly faces a smorgasbord of potential remedies, all with different implications for competition, government control and consumers' internet experience, but compromises reached in the parallel Google search monopoly litigation may point a way forward, say attorneys at MoloLamken.
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Earned Wage Access Providers Face State Law Labyrinth
At least 12 states have established laws or rules regulating services that allow employees to access earned wages before payday, with more laws potentially to follow suit, creating an evolving state licensing maze even for fintech providers that partner with banks, say attorneys at Venable.
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The Pros And Cons Of Levying Value-Based Fees On Patents
The potential for a recurring, value-based maintenance fee on patents, while offering some benefits, raises several complications, including that it would likely exceed the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's statutory authority and reduce research and development activities in the U.S., says Sandip Patel at Marshall Gerstein.
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Series
Writing Musicals Makes Me A Better Lawyer
My experiences with writing musicals and practicing law have shown that the building blocks for both endeavors are one and the same, because drama is necessary for the law to exist, says Addison O’Donnell at LOIS Law.
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Between The Lines Of EPO's Adoption Of Color Drawings
The European Patent Office's decision to accept patent drawings in color starting in October may enhance clarity in technical disclosures and streamline the examination process, and could also enable new patent filing strategies for international applicants, say attorneys at Miller Canfield.
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How Fashion, Tech Can Maximize New Small Biz Tax Breaks
Fashion and technology companies, which invest heavily in innovation, should consider taking advantage of provisions in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act that favor small businesses, restructuing if necessary to become eligible for expanded research and experimental expenditure credits and qualified small business stock incentives, says Aime Salazar at Olshan Frome.
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3 Circuits Breathe Life Into Privacy Enforcement, For Now
With the Second Circuit's recent decision in Verizon v. Federal Communications Commission, three courts of appeals have weighed in on all four record-breaking fines imposed, showing that — at least for now — the FCC continues to have broad authority to set and enforce privacy rules outside of the Fifth Circuit, say attorneys at HWG.
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Series
Adapting To Private Practice: From Va. AUSA To Mid-Law
Returning to the firm where I began my career after seven years as an assistant U.S. attorney in Virginia has been complex, nuanced and rewarding, and I’ve learned that the pursuit of justice remains the constant, even as the mindset and client change, says Kristin Johnson at Woods Rogers.
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How 5th Circ.'s NLRB Ruling May Reshape Federal Labor Law
The Fifth Circuit's recent SpaceX National Labor Relations Board decision undermines the agency's authority, but it does not immediately shut down NLRB enforcement, so employers and labor organizations should expect more litigation, more uncertainty and a possible U.S. Supreme Court showdown, say attorneys at Goldberg Segalla.
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7 Document Review Concepts New Attorneys Need To Know
For new associates joining firms this fall, stepping into the world of e-discovery can feel like learning a new language, but understanding a handful of fundamentals — from coding layouts to metadata — can help attorneys become fluent in document review, says Ann Motl at Bowman and Brooke.
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Senate Bill Could Overhaul Digital Asset Market Structure
The Senate Banking Committee's draft Responsible Financial Innovation Act would not only clarify the roles and responsibilities of financial institutions engaging in digital asset activities but also impose new compliance regimes, reporting requirements and risk management protocols, say attorneys at Troutman.
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Opinion
Congress Must Resolve PSLRA Issue For Section 11 Litigants
By establishing a uniform judgment reduction credit for all defendants in cases involving Section 11 of the Securities Act, Congress could remove unnecessary statutory ambiguity from the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act and enable litigants to price potential settlements with greater certainty, say attorneys at Sidley.
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FTC's Reseller Suit Highlights Larger Ticket Platform Issues
Taken together, the recent Federal Trade Commission lawsuit and Ticketmaster's recent antitrust woes demonstrate that federal enforcers are testing the resilience of antitrust and consumer-protection frameworks in an evolving, tech-driven marketplace, says Thomas Stratmann at George Mason University.
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How Value-Based Patent Fees May Shape IP Strategies
If the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office implements rumored plans to correlate patent fees with patent value, the financial and strategic consequences would largely depend on the specifics of how, when and how often patent values are assessed, say attorneys at Cleary.