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Technology
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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.
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January 16, 2026
Judge Won't Toss Google Patent Suit After Hearing No-Show
A Manhattan federal judge has said he wasn't going to take a magistrate judge's recommendation to toss a patent infringement suit against Google due to the plaintiff defying court orders and skipping a bench trial, saying missing the trial did not amount to "failing to prosecute" the case in a manner that would warrant dismissal.
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January 16, 2026
Dems Balk At FCC Drive For Simpler Broadband Labels
The Federal Communications Commission wants to move toward broadband "nutrition" labels that it thinks consumers could more easily navigate, even if that means taking out a separate line about early termination fees for high-speed plans, the FCC chair said this week.
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January 16, 2026
ChatGPT Users Say Microsoft Can't Duck Antitrust Suit
ChatGPT subscribers urged a California federal judge Friday not to dismiss their lawsuit accusing Microsoft of undermining OpenAI by forcing the artificial intelligence giant into using its cloud computing exclusively, a day after they said Microsoft has no claim to alternatively force the proposed class action into arbitration.
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January 16, 2026
Smaller AI Deals Have Surged As Cos. Seek Talent, Tech Edge
While multibillion-dollar artificial intelligence deals and partnerships continue to draw attention, AI dealmaking at the lower end of the market has surged in volume, as buyers seek incremental technological advantages amid the AI arms race.
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January 16, 2026
Tesla Gets 5-Week Extension In NHTSA Probe
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is giving Tesla an extra five weeks to respond to an investigation that the agency opened last fall into reports of accidents and traffic law violations involving vehicles operating with its driver assistance system known as Full Self-Driving.
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January 16, 2026
Fed. Circ. Says Part Of Sunoco Butane Blending Patent Invalid
The Federal Circuit on Friday ruled that claims in one of Sunoco's gasoline blending patents that Magellan Midstream was found to have infringed were not eligible for patent protection in the first place, but found the rest of the claims at issue passed muster.
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January 16, 2026
Taxation With Representation: Stibbe, A&O Shearman, Latham
In this week's Taxation With Representation, Keurig Dr Pepper Inc. plans to complete its deal to snap up coffee company JDE Peet's NV, Boston Scientific Corp. acquires medical device company Penumbra Inc., and fitness and wellness platform parent Playlist merges with fitness technology company EGYM.
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January 16, 2026
Fed. Circ. Won't Revive Patent Suit Against Nintendo Switch
The Federal Circuit on Friday affirmed a California federal judge's conclusion that Nintendo's popular Nintendo Switch system did not infringe Gamevice Inc. patents, although it remanded an invalidity ruling that one judge feared could result in "really wacky case law."
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January 16, 2026
Chipmaker SEEQC Merges With Blank Check Co. In $1B Deal
Chipmaker SEEQC Inc. announced Friday that it has agreed to merge with special purpose acquisition company Allegro Merger Corp. in a deal that values it at $1 billion and was built by four law firms.
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January 16, 2026
High Court Takes Up Intel Workers' Bid To Revive 401(k) Suit
The U.S. Supreme Court agreed Friday to hear Intel workers' challenge to a Ninth Circuit decision backing an end to their proposed class action alleging 401(k) mismanagement, a case that gives the justices a chance to clarify the pleading standards for retirement fund underperformance.
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January 16, 2026
11th Circ. Won't Revive Fla. Remote School TM Suit
The Eleventh Circuit has rejected an appeal from Florida Virtual School to revive its trademark infringement claims against a competitor, saying it had not shown evidence that it suffered actual damages as the result of any consumer confusion.
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January 16, 2026
Justices Will Decide Constitutionality Of Geofence Warrants
The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday agreed to review the constitutionality of geofence warrants, used by law enforcement to pinpoint suspects' whereabouts using location data handed over by technology firms like Google.
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January 16, 2026
Bioness $110M Sale Suit Heads to $8.9M Deal
A Delaware Chancery Court class action challenging the $110 million sale of medical device maker Bioness Inc. to Bioventus Inc. is reaching a resolution through an $8.9 million proposed settlement, capping years of litigation over whether the deal was engineered to favor the company's controlling creditor at the expense of minority stockholders.
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January 16, 2026
TaylorMade Claims Golf Rival's UV 'Test' Misleads Consumers
TaylorMade Golf Co. Inc. in a California federal lawsuit accused its rival Topgolf Callaway Brands of running a disparaging smear campaign meant to convince consumers it has inferior, poor-performing products, in violation of the Lanham Act.
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January 16, 2026
Supreme Court Hacker Pleads Guilty To Misdemeanor Charge
A 24-year-old Tennessee man pled guilty Friday to a single misdemeanor charge for hacking into the U.S. Supreme Court's filing system and several other government networks, admitting that he "intentionally accessed a computer without authorization" on 25 different days in 2023.
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January 16, 2026
Warren Kash Rebrands After Partner Departure
Technology litigation firm Warren Kash Warren LLP announced Thursday that it is changing its name to Warren LLP following the departure of Jen Kash, who has joined California-based Bunsow De Mory LLP.
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January 16, 2026
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London saw the David Lloyd gym chain file an intellectual property claim against its founder, security company Primekings reignite a long-running dispute with the former owners of an acquired business, and a pair of Belizean developers sue a finance executive they say shut them out of a cruise port project.
Expert Analysis
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IP Appellate Decisions Show 4 Shifts In 2025
In 2025, intellectual property decisions issued by the Ninth, D.C., and Federal Circuits trended toward tightening doctrinal boundaries, whether to account for technological developments in existing legal regimes, or to refine areas with some ambiguity, says Nate Sabri at Perkins Coie.
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Calif. AI Law Will Have Ripple Effect On Emerging Cos.
California's Transparency in Frontier Artificial Intelligence Act is the first comprehensive state-level AI safety framework with mandated public disclosures in the U.S., and although it may not affect emerging companies directly, companies that embed governance and transparency into their operations will differentiate themselves in highly competitive markets, say attorneys at Mintz.
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Series
The Law Firm Merger Diaries: Forming Measurable Ties
Relationship-building should begin as early as possible in a law firm merger, as intentional pathways to bringing people together drive collaboration, positive client response, engagements and growth, says Amie Colby at Troutman.
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Opinion
US Cybersecurity Strategy Must Include Immigration Reform
Cyberthreats are escalating while the cybersecurity workforce remains constrained due to a lack of clear standards for national-interest determinations, processing backlogs affecting professionals who protect critical public systems and visa allocations that do not reflect real-world demands, says Rusten Hurd at Colombo & Hurd.
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FDA's AI Deployment Brings New Potential And Risks
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration's recent announcement about making agentic artificial intelligence tools available to agency employees may portend accelerated regulatory timelines and lower costs for drug companies and consumers, but potential errors and biases will necessitate additional safeguards, says Angela Silva at Lewis Brisbois.
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Del. Dispatch: What Tesla Decision Means For Exec Comp
The recent Delaware Supreme Court decision granting Tesla CEO Elon Musk his full pay, now valued at $139 billion, following a yearslong battle appears to reject the view that supersized compensation may be inherently unfair to a corporation and its shareholders, say attorneys at Fried Frank.
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5 E-Discovery Predictions For 2026 And Beyond
2026 will likely be shaped by issues ranging from artificial intelligence regulatory turbulence to potential evidence rule changes, and e-discovery professionals will need to understand how to effectively guide the responsible and defensible adoption of emerging tools, while also ensuring effective safeguards, say attorneys at Littler.
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2026 State AI Bills That Could Expand Liability, Insurance Risk
State bills legislating artificial intelligence that are expected to pass in 2026 will reshape the liability landscape for all companies incorporating AI solutions into their business operations, as any novel private rights of action authorized under AI-related statutes signal expanding exposures, say attorneys at Wiley.
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Reviewing Historical And Recent NYDFS Blockchain Guidance
Excerpt from Practical Guidance
An industry letter released in the fall by the New York State Department of Financial Services, together with guidance issued over the past decade, signals a heightened regulatory expectation for covered institutions regarding the use of blockchain analytics and requires review, says Nicole De Santis at Nomadis Consulting.
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SEC Virtu Deal Previews Risks Of Nonpublic Info In AI Models
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s recent settlement with Virtu Financial Inc. over alleged failures to safeguard customer data raises broader questions about how traditional enforcement frameworks may apply when material nonpublic information is embedded into artificial intelligence trading systems, says Braeden Anderson at Gesmer Updegrove.
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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.