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October 30, 2025
SpaceX's China Ties Require Scrutiny, FCC Told
SpaceX's plan to buy $17 billion in spectrum shouldn't be approved until the FCC looks into Elon Musk's "deep reliance" on the Chinese Communist Party for financing his space exploration company's operations and manufacturing its equipment, a consumer group says.
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October 30, 2025
Palantir Says Ex-Engineers Stole IP To Build Copycat AI Biz
Palantir Technologies hauled two former employees into New York federal court Thursday, accusing them of absconding with its confidential intellectual property and exploiting its customer relationships to stealthily create a competing copycat artificial intelligence platform.
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October 30, 2025
Verizon Fights USPTO Bid To Block Fed. Circ. Patent Appeal
Verizon has shot back at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's argument that the Federal Circuit can't hear its appeal of former acting Director Coke Morgan Stewart's decision to wipe out a Patent Trial and Appeal Board decision in the company's favor invalidating an Omega Patents patent.
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October 30, 2025
Apple Retaliated Against Worker Over Mental Health, Suit Says
Apple brushed off a former employee's mental and emotional health issues caused by the "intolerable workload" he faced and retaliated against him once he indicated he needed to take time off, the worker said in a complaint in California state court.
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October 30, 2025
IRS Discloses Record In ICE Data Sharing Case
The IRS, following a judge's order, has released its administrative record in a lawsuit over its agreement to share taxpayer information with federal immigration authorities, including emails in which officials discuss U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's request for information on nearly 1.3 million taxpayers.
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October 30, 2025
Copyright Rules For AI Creations Too Strict, IP Panel Says
The U.S. Copyright Office's rule barring registration of works created entirely by artificial intelligence systems may be overly strict and unlikely to endure, according to a panel of legal experts who discussed the matter Wednesday at the American Intellectual Property Law Association's annual conference in D.C.
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October 30, 2025
Cox Wants Justices To Erase ISP Liability Verdict
Internet service provider Cox asked the U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday to vacate a $1 billion jury verdict holding it liable for its customers' illegal music downloads, saying it never took an affirmative action to further any infringement as would be required under high court precedent.
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October 30, 2025
Ex-Amazon Coder Again Avoids Prison For Capital One Hack
A former Amazon coder who exposed personal information belonging to nearly 100 million people amid a data breach targeting Capital One in 2019 was resentenced Wednesday in Washington federal court to time served, plus two years of supervised release and community service and ordered to pay nearly $41 million in restitution.
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October 30, 2025
AT&T Sues Watchdog Over Luke Wilson Ad Cease And Desist
AT&T Mobility sued a division of the Better Business Bureau in Texas federal court on Thursday in response to a cease and desist letter sent by the consumer organization demanding AT&T pull its new ad campaign featuring actor Luke Wilson that targets wireless carrier T-Mobile's marketing.
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October 30, 2025
Cooley, Fenwick Drive Travel Tech Firm Navan's $923M IPO
Corporate travel and expense management software provider Navan began trading publicly Thursday after raising $923 million in its initial public offering.
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October 30, 2025
OpenAI Preps For IPO At $1T Valuation, Plus More Rumors
Sam Altman's OpenAI is prepping plans for an initial public offering that could value the artificial intelligence behemoth at up to $1 trillion, Facebook-owner Meta is preparing for an up to $25 billion bond offering, and major banks are gearing up for the launch of a $38 billion debt offering to fund data centers to be used by technology giant Oracle.
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October 30, 2025
London Stock Exchange Botched MayStreet Deal, Suit Says
MayStreet Inc.'s co-founder and former CEO sued the London Stock Exchange Group PLC and a few of its subsidiaries Thursday in the Delaware Chancery Court, claiming they lured him into selling the company with false promises of growth and then failed to honor post-closing obligations under the merger contract.
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October 30, 2025
Universal Music Settles Copyright Claims With Udio
Universal Music Group has settled copyright infringement claims it had brought along with several other large music labels in New York federal court against AI music creation startup Udio and said the two will collaborate to create a licensed AI music service.
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October 29, 2025
Compass Loses Bid For Redfin Docs In Zillow Antitrust Suit
A New York federal court Wednesday refused to order property listing company Redfin Corp. to turn over documents requested by brokerage Compass in its antitrust suit against Zillow Inc., finding that the request should have been made in Washington federal court instead.
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October 29, 2025
H&R Block Loses Bid To Compel Arbitration In Privacy Suit
A California federal judge Tuesday denied H&R Block's bid to make two consumers arbitrate their allegations that it unlawfully shared their private taxpayer data with Meta and Google, finding that unconscionability "permeates" the entirety of an underlying arbitration agreement.
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October 29, 2025
Character.AI Will Ban Underage Users From Using Chatbot
Amid multiple lawsuits over the suicides of at least four teenagers, Character.AI announced Wednesday that it is taking "extraordinary steps" to restrict minors' access to its flagship artificial intelligence chatbot.
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October 29, 2025
NY's Allstate Data Breach Case Sent Back To State Court
A New York federal judge has sent a data breach lawsuit against an Allstate Insurance Co. unit back to state court, ruling that he lacks subject matter jurisdiction in the suit because the causes of action in the litigation are not created by federal law.
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October 29, 2025
Link Motion Chair Can't Get Investor's Final Claim Clipped
A New York federal judge agreed Wednesday to cut certain fraud claims by a Link Motion investor against the chair of the China-based software company, while allowing others to proceed over the chair's objections.
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October 29, 2025
NBA Subscribers Can't Block Arbitration In Video Privacy Row
A New York federal judge has sent to arbitration a putative class action accusing the National Basketball Association's marketing arm of illegally sharing information about League Pass subscribers' video-viewing activities with third parties, finding that the plaintiffs had "sufficient notice" of the mandatory pre-dispute resolution process outlined in their subscription terms.
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October 29, 2025
Opendoor Investors Ask For Final OK Of Reforms Settlement
Investors of Opendoor Technologies Inc. have asked an Arizona federal judge to give the final OK to a settlement that includes corporate governance reforms and $1.9 million in attorney fees, to end a derivative suit that claimed they were misled about the efficacy of Opendoor's artificial intelligence pricing algorithm used to buy and sell homes.
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October 29, 2025
DOJ Says State AGs Can't 'Second-Guess' HPE Merger Deal
The U.S. Department of Justice and Hewlett Packard Enterprise separately urged a California federal judge Tuesday not to let a dozen state attorneys general peek behind the controversial settlement clearing HPE's $14 billion purchase of Juniper Networks, arguing public comment, not direct intervention, is their appropriate role.
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October 29, 2025
FINRA Incorporates AI Into Surveillance, Risk Reviews
The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority has made extensive use of artificial intelligence internally, including for market surveillance and conducting firm risk reviews, the regulator's top executive said Wednesday.
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October 29, 2025
ZoomInfo Must Face Investors' Accounting Fraud Suit
A Washington federal judge is allowing investors in software provider ZoomInfo Technologies Inc. to move forward with claims that the company acted to conceal post-pandemic customer losses, but threw out allegations against controlling shareholders that the judge said lacked a factual basis.
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October 29, 2025
NYC Sued Over 'Voyeuristic' Police Surveillance System
A Brooklyn couple has filed a federal lawsuit alleging New York City uses a "voyeuristic" police surveillance system on all visitors and residents, which includes two police cameras that are aimed at the couple's bedroom and living room windows.
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October 29, 2025
Del. Justices Mull Call To Revive Amazon-Blue Origin Suit
An Amazon.com stockholder attorney told Delaware's justices on Wednesday that the company's board "failed to do a thing" as founder Jeff Bezos convinced directors to pump billions into the Blue Origin space launch business with purportedly scant oversight, looking to salvage a Court of Chancery derivative suit dismissed in January.
Expert Analysis
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Reviewing EU Competition Policy 1 Year After Draghi's Report
Implementation of the Mario Draghi report’s proposals to revamp European Union competition policy is currently case-specific, making it less visible, and more needs to be done in the way of merger review and antitrust enforcement, say lawyers at Linklaters.
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How Calif. Law Cracks Down On Algorithmic Price-Fixing
Gov. Gavin Newsom signed two laws this month significantly expanding state antitrust enforcement and civil and criminal penalties for the use or distribution of shared pricing algorithms, as the U.S. Department of Justice has recently wielded the Sherman Act to challenge algorithmic pricing, say attorneys at Pillsbury.
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USPTO Under Squires: A Look At The First Month
New U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Director John Squires' opening acts — substantive and symbolic — signal a posture that is more welcoming to technological improvements and focused on rebalancing the office's gatekeeping role, say attorneys at Seyfarth.
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Opinion
Expert Reports Can't Replace Facts In Securities Fraud Cases
The Ninth Circuit's 2023 decision in Nvidia v. Ohman Fonder — and the U.S. Supreme Court's punt on the case in 2024 — could invite the meritless securities litigation the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act was designed to prevent by substituting expert opinions for facts to substantiate complaint assertions, say attorneys at A&O Shearman.
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Glimmers Of Clarity Appear Amid Open Banking Disarray
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's vacillation over data rights rules has created uncertainty, but a recent proposal is a strong signal that open banking regulations are here to stay, making now the ideal time for entities to take action to decrease compliance risk, says Adam Maarec at McGlinchey Stafford.
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Opinion
High Court, Not A Single Justice, Should Decide On Recusal
As public trust in the U.S. Supreme Court continues to decline, the court should adopt a collegial framework in which all justices decide questions of recusal together — a reform that respects both judicial independence and due process for litigants, say Michael Broyde at Emory University and Hayden Hall at the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware.
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FTC's Consumer Finance Pivot Brings Industry Pros And Cons
An active Federal Trade Commission against the backdrop of a leashed Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will be welcomed by most in the consumer finance industry, but the incremental expansion of the FTC's authority via enforcement actions remains a risk, say attorneys at Hudson Cook.
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Amazon Ruling Marks New Era Of Personal Liability For Execs
A Washington federal court's recent decision in FTC v. Amazon extended personal liability to senior executives for design-driven violations of broad consumer protection statutes, signaling a fundamental shift in how consumer protection laws may be enforced against large public companies, say attorneys at Orrick.
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3 New Cyberinsurance Rulings Aid In Policy Interpretation
Although the cyberinsurance market has exploded, there is no standardized cyber language or form and only a few court decisions thus far interpreting cyberinsurance policy language, making these three recent rulings key for guiding policyholders, insurers and brokers, say attorneys at Haynes Boone.
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USPTO Panel's Reversal Signals A Shift On AI Patents
A recent patent ruling from a U.S. Patent and Trademark Office panel shows that artificial intelligence technologies remain patent-eligible when properly framed as technical solutions, and provides valuable drafting lessons for counsel, say attorneys at Butzel Long.
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Series
Traveling Solo Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Traveling by myself has taught me to assess risk, understand tone and stay calm in high-pressure situations, which are not only useful life skills, but the foundation of how I support my clients, says Lacey Gutierrez at Group Five Legal.
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Latest PTAB Moves Suggest A Subtle Recalibration
Recent decisions from the Patent Trial and Appeal Board, as U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Director John Squires transitions into his new role, offer new procedural and substantive tools for patent owners in procuring patent rights and enforcing them against would-be petitioners, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.
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NY Zelle Suit Highlights Fraud Risks Of Electronic Payments
The New York attorney general's recent action against Zelle's parent company, filed several months after the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau abandoned a similar suit, demonstrates the fraud risks that electronic payment platforms can present and the need for providers to carefully balance accessibility and consumer protection, say attorneys at Weiner Brodsky.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Client Service
Law school teaches you how to interpret the law, but it doesn't teach you some of the key ways to keeping clients satisfied, lessons that I've learned in the most unexpected of places: a book on how to be a butler, says Gregory Ramos at Armstrong Teasdale.
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How Occasional Activists Have Reshaped Proxy Fights
The sophistication and breadth of first-time activist engagement continue to shape corporate governance and strategic outcomes, as evidenced across corporate annual meetings this summer, meaning advisers should anticipate continued innovation in tactics, increased regulatory complexity, and a persistent focus on board accountability, say attorneys at MoFo.