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Technology
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November 13, 2025
Rumble Cites Judge's Longtime Friendship With Google VP
Rumble asked a California federal judge to consider recusal should the Ninth Circuit revive its antitrust lawsuit against Google, citing a yearslong friendship with Google's top in-house litigation chief that involved the judge officiating at her wedding and their ongoing participation in a fantasy football league.
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November 13, 2025
Google Says Latest EU Probe Attacks Anti-Spam Efforts
Google said on Thursday that a new investigation launched by European enforcers into the tech giant's compliance with recently enacted rules for digital markets targets a practice designed to keep spam from infiltrating search results.
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November 13, 2025
Contract 'Mystifies' Judge Weighing Ammo Tech Secrets Suit
A North Carolina Business Court judge appeared mildly vexed at the terms of an employment contract underpinning an ammunition technology trade secrets suit, acknowledging in a Thursday hearing that "it's not the best worded contract in the history of the world."
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November 13, 2025
3rd Circ. Says Quest Didn't Eavesdrop In Data Privacy Suit
The Third Circuit on Thursday upheld a win for Quest Diagnostics, which beat a class action alleging it inappropriately shared patient data with Meta Platforms through ad tracking software on its website, with the court reasoning that information was not unlawfully collected because it wasn't obtained through eavesdropping.
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November 13, 2025
Mobile Biz Asks Congress To Nix Military's Spectrum Right
Congress needs to toss a provision wrapped into the Senate's version of the defense authorization bill that allows the military to reject certain spectrum allocations to the private sector, a top wireless industry advocate said Thursday.
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November 13, 2025
NY Judge Declines Sanctions For Citation Errors — Again
For the second time in as many months, a Manhattan federal judge has stopped short of sanctioning an attorney for including false case citations in a filing, warning the lawyer in an order that he had better not allow errors again.
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November 13, 2025
Chaos Industries Secures $510M To Boost Defense Tech
Defense technology company Chaos Industries said Thursday it has raised $510 million in new funding led by Valor Equity Partners, with participation from existing backers 8VC and Accel, at a valuation of $4.5 billion.
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November 13, 2025
AI Coding Biz Valued At $29.3B After $2.3B Funding Round
Artificial intelligence development platform Cursor on Thursday revealed that its valuation had soared to $29.3 billion after it wrapped its latest funding round with $2.3 billion in investor commitments.
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November 13, 2025
DocGo Investors Seek OK Of $12.5M Deal Over Ex-CEO Claims
Investors of mobile medical provider DocGo have asked a New York federal court to grant preliminary approval of their $12.5 million settlement of claims that the company deceived stockholders before a $432 million contract with New York City to provide emergency migrant housing came under public scrutiny.
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November 13, 2025
C3 AI Considers Sale After CEO Departs, Plus More Rumors
Artificial intelligence software provider C3 AI is exploring a sale after its founder and CEO stepped down earlier this year, British telecommunications provider SCG weighs a potential sale at a $1.07 billion valuation, and U.K.-based fintech company Iwoca is in talks about a sale that could value it at $1.34 billion.
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November 13, 2025
Patent Owner Drops Digital Ticket Patent Suit Against MLB
The owner of a patent that covers digital ticketing technology has dropped infringement claims brought against Major League Baseball's interactive division, ending the claims against the last remaining defendant in the case.
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November 12, 2025
Oracle's Lax Security Led To Customer Data Breach, Suit Says
Oracle Corp. has been hit with a proposed class action in Texas federal court alleging the tech company failed to protect customers' sensitive information from hackers who breached its network in July and then waited months before notifying those affected.
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November 12, 2025
Feds Launch Crypto Scam Strike Force With New Sanctions
Federal authorities said Wednesday they have created a strike force targeting cryptocurrency-related fraud and scams originating in Southeast Asia, a development announced alongside the addition of a Burmese armed group to a list of entities under U.S. sanctions.
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November 12, 2025
Investor Accuses Cable Provider Of Unfair Buyout Proposal
A proposed buyout of cable operator WideOpenWest Inc. from its controlling shareholder is under fire in Colorado state court from an investor who claims the company's recent proxy statement fails to disclose the "troubling motivations and conflicts of interest" of WOW's executives and directors.
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November 12, 2025
Fraudster Who Touted Bogus Space Travel Co. Gets 4 Years
A California man who federal prosecutors say defrauded investors with elaborate lies about a non-existent tech company making tens of billions of dollars developing space travel and robotics was sentenced Wednesday by a California federal judge to more than four years' imprisonment, according to a U.S. Justice Department spokesperson.
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November 12, 2025
Coinbase To Move To Texas, Citing 'Litigious' Delaware
Coinbase told the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Wednesday that the cryptocurrency exchange is leaving Delaware to reincorporate in Texas, citing the "increasingly litigious environment in Delaware" and the Lone Star State's recently enacted laws that place numerous restrictions on shareholder suits and help shield executives from investor litigation.
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November 12, 2025
Google Spying On Users With Newly Default AI Tool, Suit Says
Google is illegally tracking its email, chat and videoconferencing users' private communications through its Gemini AI assistant, which the tech giant secretly turned on by default for all users without their knowledge or consent last month, according to a proposed class action filed Tuesday in California federal court.
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November 12, 2025
Stride Faces Investor Suit Over 'Ghost Students' Claims
Education technology company Stride Inc. and some of its brass face a proposed investor class action alleging the company inflated enrollment numbers and cut staff, hurting investors after it was accused in a lawsuit of counting "ghost students" on its rolls to secure per-student funding.
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November 12, 2025
Ensure Feds Preempt On Phone Line Upgrades, FCC Told
The Federal Communications Commission must "seize this pivotal moment" and clarify that federal priorities to remove copper from the nation's telecommunications infrastructure have precedent over state or local regulations, says a Georgetown University-affiliated policy center.
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November 12, 2025
PTAB Officials Back Visa Win After Squires-Ordered Review
Three top Patent Trial and Appeal Board judges have rejected a patent owner's bid to undo the board's findings invalidating credential verification patent claims that Visa Inc. challenged, after U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Director John Squires asked them to take another look at the case.
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November 12, 2025
Fed. Circ. Won't Restore Payment Processing Patent Claims
The Federal Circuit on Wednesday affirmed the Patent Trial and Appeal Board's invalidation of claims from three CloudofChange LLC patents, two of which are involved in a separate multimillion-dollar lawsuit.
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November 12, 2025
Adult Webcam Owner Says Illegal Thailand Studio Cost $1.5M
A Florida adult webcam operator moved his family to Thailand and spent hundreds of thousands of dollars setting up a studio only to learn that production in the country is illegal, his business claims in a lawsuit against the streaming platform that it says encouraged the plan.
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November 12, 2025
Aerospace Co. Faces Investor Suit Over Rocket Failures
Space and defense technology company Firefly Aerospace Inc. has been hit with a proposed shareholder class action accusing it of filing false and misleading documents ahead of its recent initial public offering that overhyped the potential of a rocket launch, which the company later revealed had failed testing.
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November 12, 2025
Antitrust Plaintiffs Want Chat On Apple, Google CEO Depos
A group of consumers asked a federal judge on Wednesday for a private hearing after the court rejected their request to depose Apple CEO Tim Cook and Google CEO Sundar Pichai in antitrust litigation accusing Google of suppressing rival search engines with anticompetitive deals.
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November 12, 2025
FCC To Face Senate Oversight Following Kimmel Controversy
For the first time in half a decade, the full Senate Commerce Committee will convene for an oversight hearing, this time to place an examining eye on the FCC after the head of the agency said ABC could lose its license if it didn't punish talk show host Jimmy Kimmel for comments he made on air.
Expert Analysis
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Series
Adapting To Private Practice: From Texas AUSA To BigLaw
As I learned when I transitioned from an assistant U.S. attorney to a BigLaw partner, the move from government to private practice is not without its hurdles, but it offers immense potential for growth and the opportunity to use highly transferable skills developed in public service, says Jeffery Vaden at Bracewell.
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Data Undermines USPTO's 'Settled Expectations' Doctrine
An analysis of inter partes review proceedings filed since 2012 appears to refute the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's recent stance that patent owners develop a strong settled expectation that their patents will not be challenged after being in force for six years, say Jonathan DeFosse and Samuel Smith at Sheppard Mullin, and Kenzo Kasai at NGB Corp.
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Union Interference Lessons From 5th Circ. Apple Ruling
The Fifth Circuit's recent holding that Apple did not violate the National Labor Relations Act during a store's union organizing drive provides guidance on what constitutes coercive interrogation and clarifies how consistently enforced workplace policies may be applied to union literature, say attorneys at Proskauer.
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Advice For 1st-Gen Lawyers Entering The Legal Profession
Nikki Hurtado at The Ferraro Law Firm tells her story of being a first-generation lawyer and how others who begin their professional journeys without the benefit of playbooks handed down by relatives can turn this disadvantage into their greatest strength.
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9th Circ. Qualified Immunity Ruling May Limit Phone Searches
Though the Ninth Circuit affirmed police officers’ qualified immunity claims in Olson v. County of Grant earlier this year, it also established important Fourth Amendment precedent on the use of cellphone extractions that will apply more broadly in criminal investigations and prosecutions, say attorneys at The Norton Law Firm.
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Series
Coaching Cheerleading Makes Me A Better Lawyer
At first glance, cheerleading and litigation may seem like worlds apart, but both require precision, adaptability, leadership and the ability to stay composed under pressure — all of which have sharpened how I approach my work in the emotionally complex world of mass torts and personal injury, says Rashanda Bruce at Robins Kaplan.
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Unpacking The BIS Guidance On Chinese AI Chip Use
In response to May guidance from the Bureau of Industry and Security, which indicates the agency considers a wide but somewhat unclear range of activities involving Chinese integrated circuits to be in violation of its General Prohibition 10, companies should consider adopting enhanced due diligence to determine how firm counterparties may be using the affected chips, says Peter Lichtenbaum at Covington.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: How To Make A Deal
Preparing lawyers for the nuances of a transactional practice is not a strong suit for most law schools, but, in practice, there are six principles that can help young M&A lawyers become seasoned, trusted deal advisers, says Chuck Morton at Venable.
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Annual Report Shows CFIUS Extending Its Reach In 2024
The recently released 2024 annual report from the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States reveals record civil penalties and enhanced internal capabilities, illustrating expanding jurisdiction and an increasing appetite for enforcement actions, says Nathan Fisher at StoneTurn.
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From Clerkship To Law Firm: 5 Transition Tips For Associates
Excerpt from Practical Guidance
Transitioning from a judicial clerkship to an associate position at a law firm may seem daunting, but by using knowledge gained while clerking, being mindful of key differences and taking advantage of professional development opportunities, these attorneys can flourish in private practice, say attorneys at Lowenstein Sandler.
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Cybersecurity Risks Can Lurk In Gov't Contractor Acquisitions
The Justice Department’s recent False Claims Act enforcement activity against Raytheon and Nightwing-related defense contractors demonstrates the importance of identifying and mitigating potential cybersecurity compliance risks when acquiring a company that contracts with the federal government, say attorneys at Foley & Lardner.
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Associates Can Earn Credibility By Investing In Relationships
As the class of 2025 prepares to join law firms this fall, new associates must adapt to office dynamics and establish credible reputations — which require quiet, consistent relationship-building skills as much as legal acumen, says Kyle Forges at Bast Amron.
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New Colo. Teen Privacy Rules Signal National Regulatory Shift
Recently released proposed rule amendments to the Colorado Privacy Act that would create some of the most robust protections for minors' online data in the U.S. reflect an ongoing trend of states taking steps to extend privacy protection for their residents, complicating the compliance burden for companies, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.
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Trending At The PTAB: IPR Memo And Its Fed. Circ. Backdrop
There are new rules for when and how evidence other than patents or printed publications can be considered in inter partes reviews, and while this change is intended to reflect current Federal Circuit precedent, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's memo seems to acknowledge tension with last month's Shockwave decision, say attorneys at Finnegan.
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A Look At New Calif. Cybersecurity, Risk Assessment Rules
The California Privacy Protection Agency Board recently finalized regulations related to automated decision-making technology, cybersecurity audits and risk assessments that establish additional requirements on businesses operating in California, and although these new rules are less onerous than some of the draft rules, compliance may still require substantial planning and updates, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.