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Intellectual Property
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March 05, 2025
Broadcom Slams 'Meritless Retaliatory' Netflix Patent Suit
Technology giant Broadcom blasted a patent infringement lawsuit filed by Netflix over five software patents Broadcom contends are invalid and urged a federal California court to toss the litigation, calling it a "meritless retaliatory case" meant to distract from Netflix's "rampant infringement of patents owned by Broadcom-related entities."
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March 05, 2025
Paul Newman's Daughters End IP Suit Against Newman's Own
Late actor Paul Newman's daughters withdrew their lawsuit from Connecticut state court accusing the Newman's Own Foundation of trading off their father's name for non-food-related purposes and breaching its duty to fund their own foundations despite the deceased film star's intent.
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March 05, 2025
Alibaba Denies Control Over Copycat Dr. Martens Adverts
E-commerce site Alibaba has told a London court that it played no part in creating sponsored online advertising containing trademarks owned by Dr. Martens, but claims that the iconic leather boot brand also has not genuinely used all its trademarks.
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March 05, 2025
Pfizer, BioNTech Get PTAB To Invalidate Moderna Vaccine IP
The Patent Trial and Appeal Board handed a massive victory to Pfizer and BioNTech on Wednesday, as it invalidated two Moderna patents covering its Spikevax COVID-19 vaccine, which the challengers stand accused of infringing.
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March 05, 2025
Court Finds StockX Liable In Counterfeit Nike Sneaker Suit
Following oral arguments in New York federal court on Tuesday, a judge found sneaker reseller StockX LLC liable for selling counterfeit Nike shoes, ordering the companies to find available trial dates this year for the remaining allegations.
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March 04, 2025
Agencies Have 'Ultimate' Authority Over Firings, OPM Says
The Office of Personnel Management on Tuesday issued a revised version of its January memo directing agency heads to identify all probationary employees, adding a disclaimer that OPM "is not directing agencies to take any specific performance-based actions" and that agencies "have ultimate decision-making authority."
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March 04, 2025
Car Cos. Need Facts, Not Opinions, In Patent Suit, Judge Says
A Michigan federal judge on Tuesday pressed auto manufacturers for concrete proof that Neo Wireless investors withheld key information about a rival's project from patent officials, telling the carmakers they can't just fall back on an out-of-state judge's opinion to win the patent dispute.
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March 04, 2025
ITC To Weigh Essential Patent Import Bans In Amazon Row
The U.S. International Trade Commission is seeking public comments on whether the owners of standard-essential patents should be able to obtain ITC import bans on infringing products, in a case where a judge found that Amazon TVs and tablets infringed Nokia video patents.
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March 04, 2025
PTAB Orders Mostly Backing Apple, Others Upheld On Appeal
The Federal Circuit on Tuesday affirmed Patent Trial and Appeal Board decisions that Apple and others had shown most claims of a patent on using cameras to sense gestures by users are invalid, but said the board correctly upheld two claims.
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March 04, 2025
Phillips 66 'Trickery' Merits $1.2B More Damages, Judge Told
A startup that won a $605 million trade secrets verdict against oil giant Phillips 66 argued Tuesday in California state court that its would-have-been acquirer owes an additional $1.2 billion for reprehensible conduct, including by in-house counsel who supposedly made "efforts to cover up" information theft.
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March 04, 2025
Apple Seeks Ban Against Masimo's Original Smartwatch
Apple has urged a Delaware federal judge to issue an injunction against a healthcare technology company found last year to have infringed two of the tech giant's design patents with its W1 smartwatch and charger, calling the defense's refusal to agree to the injunction "telling."
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March 04, 2025
Fed. Circ. Affirms PTAB Decision Backing Stem Cell Patent
A biotech research outfit failed Tuesday to persuade Federal Circuit judges to rethink an administrative board ruling that rejected a challenge mounted against a stem cell patent.
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March 04, 2025
Albright Rejects Transfer Bid In Another Apple Patent Feud
U.S. District Judge Alan Albright rejected Apple and Qualcomm Inc.'s bid to transfer Red Rock Analytics' patent suit against them from the Western District of Texas to the Northern District of California, saying in a redacted order made public Tuesday that the tech companies have not established the case "would be clearly more convenient" in the preferred venue.
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March 04, 2025
Disney Animator Tells Jury 'Moana' Was His Original Idea
A longtime animation director for The Walt Disney Co. testified in California federal court Tuesday that his blockbuster movie "Moana" was inspired by Polynesian mythology and extensive research into the region and its culture, not the work of another artist now suing for copyright infringement.
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March 04, 2025
Fla. Art Gallery Accused Of Stonewalling In Fake Warhol Suit
A group of amateur art collectors alleging they were conned into buying $6 million of fake Andy Warhol paintings told a Florida state court judge Tuesday that a Miami gallery and its dealer stonewalled financial records requests, saying the objections cited to block their subpoenas are meant for crime victims.
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March 04, 2025
Anthropic CEO Must Sit For Depo In Authors' OpenAI Suit
A California federal magistrate judge overseeing discovery in authors' high-stakes copyright suit against OpenAI ruled Tuesday that the CEO of AI startup Anthropic must sit for a six-hour deposition, after the authors argued that he previously worked at OpenAI and was responsible for the datasets used to train its machine-learning model.
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March 04, 2025
Moderna Faces MRNA Vax Patent Suits In Canada And Beyond
Pennsylvania drug developer Arbutus Biopharma and Genevant Sciences have taken their COVID-19 vaccine litigation against Moderna worldwide, suing the pharmaceutical company in courts in Canada, Japan and Switzerland, along with the Unified Patent Court, alleging infringement.
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March 04, 2025
Alcon, Lens.com Settle 7-Year Trademark Fight In NY
Alcon and Lens.com informed a New York federal judge Tuesday that they've agreed to resolve their long-running trademark dispute over claims that Lens.com was reselling some of Alcon's products without authorization.
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March 04, 2025
After 'Historic Low' In 2023, Number Of ITC Cases Soar In 2024
The U.S. International Trade Commission saw a significant uptick in disputes last year, according to a Tuesday report by a firm that represents expert witnesses used in litigation.
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March 04, 2025
ITC Clears Juul In Altria Vape Patent Dispute
The U.S. International Trade Commission has reviewed and affirmed a decision clearing Juul in an infringement case brought by Altria-owned rival NJOY over its vaping patents.
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March 04, 2025
Tobacco Co. Settles Suit Over Use Of 'Juicy' Trademark
A tobacco accessories company has told an Arizona federal court that it has settled its suit against a Washington company that it alleged had infringed on its "Juicy" products trademark.
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March 04, 2025
Athletes 'Overwhelmingly' Support NCAA NIL Deal, Attys Say
The response by the class of college athletes to the NCAA's settlement providing name, image and likeness compensation and revenue sharing has been "overwhelmingly positive,'' the attorneys for the athletes told a California federal judge as part of their bid for final approval of the $2.78 billion settlement next month.
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March 04, 2025
Approach The Bench: Judge Christopher Burke On Efficiency
U.S. Magistrate Judge Christopher Burke uses innovative techniques to manage the glut of complex cases that come through Delaware's federal court.
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March 04, 2025
New Crowell & Moring Group To Advise On Gov't Procurement
Crowell & Moring LLP has launched a new governmental consulting group to provide companies with guidance on how to obtain and carry out federal procurements, the firm announced Tuesday.
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March 04, 2025
Pretium Clinches $500M Inaugural Legal Opportunities Fund
New York-headquartered investment firm Pretium, advised by Paul Weiss Rifkind Wharton & Garrison LLP, on Tuesday revealed that it closed its inaugural Legal Opportunities Fund after securing roughly $500 million from investors.
Expert Analysis
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Racing Patents To The Fed. Circ.: Collateral Estoppel Lessons
As more and more parties find themselves in two different forums addressing the same issues and then competing in a race to the Federal Circuit, certain strategies can help despite unanswered questions on when Patent Trial and Appeal Board determinations trigger collateral estoppel, say attorneys at Akin.
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Series
Circus Arts Make Me A Better Lawyer
Performing circus arts has strengthened my ability to be more thoughtful, confident and grounded, all of which has enhanced my legal practice and allowed me to serve clients in a more meaningful way, says Bailey McGowan at Stinson.
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Purse-Case Scenarios: 'MetaBirkin' Appeal Tests TM Rights
A federal court's finding that "MetaBirkin" nonfungible tokens infringed on Hermes' iconic Birkin bag imagery is now on appeal in the Second Circuit, and the order will have a lasting effect on how courts balance trademark rights and the First Amendment, say attorneys at Venable.
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OpenAI's Patent Pledge Is Not All It Seems
A recent statement that OpenAI won't assert its own patents is more of an aspiration than an obligation, and should prompt practitioners to think deeply about the underlying legal mechanisms of patent and contract law when determining the effectiveness of similar nonassertion pledges, say attorneys at McDonnell Boehnen.
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3 Ways To Train Junior Lawyers In 30 Minutes Or Less
Today’s junior lawyers are experiencing a skills gap due to pandemic-era disruptions, but firms can help bring them up to speed by offering high-impact skill building content in bite-sized, interactive training sessions, say Stacey Schwartz at Katten, Diane Costigan at Winston & Strawn and Lauren Tierney at Freshfields.
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8 Tech Tips For Stress-Free Remote Depositions
Court reporter Kelly D’Amico shares practical strategies for attorneys to conduct remote depositions with ease and troubleshoot any issues that arise, as it seems deposition-by-Zoom is here to stay after the pandemic.
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How AstraZeneca Ruling Could Change Dosage Patent Claims
If affirmed on appeal, the rationale employed by the Delaware federal court in Wyeth v. AstraZeneca to find "unit dosage"-related patent claims invalid could lead to a significant paradigm shift in how active-ingredient-focused patent applications are drafted and litigated, say Matthew Zapadka and John Schneible at Arnall Golden.
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Bid Protest Spotlight: Unclear Criteria, Data Rights, Conflicts
Liam Bowers at MoFo examines three recent decisions from the U.S. Government Accountability Office and the U.S. Court of Federal Claims examining the use of unstated evaluation criteria, an agency's investigation of its own data rights and unequal access to information about an organizational conflict of interest.
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Failed W.Va. Patent Challenge Reveals Secret Prior Art's Risks
A West Virginia federal court's recent ruling — that references used by a patent challenger to establish an ordinarily skilled artisan's existing knowledge must be published before a patent's filing — may discourage claim construction challenges based on secret prior art and steer drafters away from externally defined terms, says Brianna Potter at Baker Botts.
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4 Ways Attorneys Can Emotionally Prepare For Trial
In the course of litigation, trial lawyers face a number of scenarios that can incite an emotional response, but formulating a mental game plan in advance of trial can help attorneys stay cool, calm and collected in the moment, says Rachel Lary at Lightfoot Franklin.
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The Bar Needs More Clarity On The Discovery Objection Rule
Almost 10 years after Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 34 was amended, attorneys still seem confused about what they should include in objections to discovery requests, and until the rules committee provides additional clarity, practitioners must beware the steep costs of noncompliance, says Tristan Ellis at Shanies Law Office.
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TM Suit Over Google AI Name Points To New Branding Issues
Gemini Data’s recent lawsuit in California federal court alleging Google’s rebranded artificial intelligence chatbot stole its name may have broader implications for the scope of trademark rights for AI-related products and highlights that an evolving marketplace may force companies to recalibrate how they protect their brands, say attorneys at ArentFox Schiff.
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Presidential Campaign Errors Provide Lessons For Trial Attys
Vice President Kamala Harris’ presidential campaign employed numerous strategies that evidently didn’t land, and trial attorneys should take note, because voters and jurors are both decision-makers who are listening for how one’s case presentation would affect them personally, says Reuben Guttman at Guttman Buschner.
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How Patent Landscape Analysis Drives Business Growth
Keegan Caldwell at Caldwell Law explores how patent landscape analysis serves as a key driver of sustainable growth — examining how its components, strategic advantages and implementation best practices are reshaping innovation leadership.
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Marching In On Orange Book Drugs May Have Limited Effect
Statistical analysis shows that marching in on Orange Book drug patent holders to require additional licensees would have a relatively minimal impact on drug prices, and should be weighed against the harms it could have on pharmaceutical innovation, say researchers at Competition Dynamics.