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Technology
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April 01, 2025
Rep. Files Bill To Study LEO Broadband Funding In Appalachia
A bill introduced by a U.S. House Republican would direct a new study on possibly providing federal aid in Appalachia for low Earth orbit satellite systems that can fill gaps in high-speed connectivity.
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April 01, 2025
SPEX Rips Western Digital Bid To Undo $553M Patent Loss
SPEX Technologies Inc. has pushed back at Western Digital Corp.'s attempt to have a California federal judge throw out a $553 million award in a patent infringement case, saying that Western Digital "faults everyone but itself."
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April 01, 2025
Loeb, Skadden Steer Siddhi Acquisition's Upsized $240M IPO
Siddhi Acquisition Corp., backed by food and technology-focused private investors, began trading Tuesday after raising an upsized $240 million initial public offering, represented by Loeb & Loeb LLP and underwriters' counsel Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom LLP.
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April 01, 2025
Hartford Unit Freed From Ill. Agency's $4M Wire Fraud Suit
An Illinois agency that administers the estates of financially distressed insurers can't get coverage from a Hartford unit for a computer system breach that the agency said caused roughly $4 million in outstanding losses, a federal court ruled, finding its claims fall outside an "electronic mail initiated fraud" coverage provision.
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April 01, 2025
VLSI Wants Full Fed. Circ. To Review Prior Art Decision
VLSI Technology is pushing the full Federal Circuit to review when a patent application counts as prior art, backing Lynk Labs in a case involving Samsung where a circuit panel said applications are prior art at the time they are filed instead of when they are published.
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April 01, 2025
Bitcoin Rival Appeals Grayscale's Win In $2M False Ads Suit
Cryptocurrency company Osprey Funds LLC is appealing a Connecticut state judge's ruling against it in its unfair trade practice suit accusing digital asset management firm Grayscale Investments LLC of misleading bitcoin investors about the security of their investments after the state court declined to reconsider its decision.
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April 01, 2025
IBM And J&J Beat 'Speculative' Data Breach Suit, For Now
A New York federal judge has tossed with leave to amend a proposed class action alleging IBM and Johnson & Johnson's healthcare arm failed to safeguard sensitive health information of thousands of patients before a 2023 data breach, finding the purported harm is "entirely speculative" as currently alleged.
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April 01, 2025
Fight Over AI Training Pushes Copying Question To Forefront
When courts weigh fair use in copyright disputes, how much a defendant takes from a particular work is usually overridden by other factors. But with artificial intelligence requiring immense amounts of training material, a legal tech company is trying to change that as it battles infringement claims by Thomson Reuters over the media company's Westlaw platform.
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April 01, 2025
NYT Demands OpenAI President Testify As Long As Staff
The New York Times has asked a federal judge to order that OpenAI president Greg Brockman sit for a standard deposition this month in copyright lawsuits over material used to train large language models, saying he should not be considered an "apex" witness who can testify for less time than his employees.
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April 01, 2025
House GOP Infighting Delays Push To Repeal 2 CFPB Rules
Plans for the U.S. House to vote on overturning two Biden-era Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rules were scuttled Tuesday by an unrelated fight among Republicans about whether to allow proxy voting for lawmakers with infant children.
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April 01, 2025
Tyler Tech Denied Early Exit From NC Civil Rights Class Action
Tyler Technologies, the Texas-based software provider behind North Carolina's transition to a digital court system, can't escape a proposed civil rights class action claiming the new technology led to wrongful arrests and extended jail time, though claims against one sheriff named in the suit were dismissed.
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April 01, 2025
Sanctioned Firm Ordered To Pay Fees In California Patent Row
Days after attorneys from Texas patent firm Ramey LLP were ordered to pay over $60,000 for practicing in California without a license, a San Francisco federal magistrate judge has ordered them to pay attorney fees in a pair of suits deemed to have been litigated in bad faith.
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April 01, 2025
NC Atty Gets $775K Fee For Multistate Wage Verdict
A North Carolina federal judge has awarded $775,000 in attorney fees to the workers of an Apple-affiliated repair company following their six-figure win in a multistate wage class action over back wages and damages.
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April 01, 2025
3 Firms Guide MDA Space's $269M SatixFy Deal
MDA Space said Tuesday it will acquire SatixFy Communications Ltd. at an equity value of approximately $193 million in a push by the Brampton, Ontario-based firm to bolster its end-to-end satellite systems offerings, with at least three law firms steering the deal.
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April 01, 2025
OpenAI Raising Up To $40B In SoftBank-Led Funding Round
Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz-led OpenAI has secured an agreement for up to $40 billion in funding led by Japan's SoftBank, in a deal that values the artificial intelligence company behind ChatGPT at $300 billion.
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March 31, 2025
Wells Fargo Sued Over Online Wire Fraud Protections
Wells Fargo has been hit in by a proposed class action California federal court accusing the bank of leaving its online and mobile banking customers exposed to costly losses from fraudulent wire transfers.
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March 31, 2025
Texas Judge Deems Lab-Test Rule Outside FDA Authority
A Texas federal judge on Monday vacated a new U.S. Food and Drug Administration rule that would have brought lab-developed tests under its regulatory authority as "medical devices," finding that the move exceeded the agency's statutory authority and defied "common sense."
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March 31, 2025
Former Stimlabs Exec Must Face Trade Secrets Claims
A former biomedical technology company executive must face claims that she absconded with thousands of internal files containing valuable product information in the days and weeks leading up to her ouster last year, a Georgia federal judge ruled.
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March 31, 2025
Ex-Blood Bank Atty Goes Back To Ballard Spahr In Phoenix
Ballard Spahr LLP has picked up a former in-house intellectual property lawyer from nonprofit blood bank Vitalant who had worked at the law firm a little over a decade ago.
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March 31, 2025
France Fines Apple €150M For App Tracking Policy
France's competition enforcer fined Apple €150 million ($162.3 million) on Monday for its rollout of a policy designed to give users more control of the data apps can track over concerns that it hindered small publishers and others that rely on data collection to finance their business.
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March 31, 2025
Driver Says Parking Garage Privacy Suit Can't Be Arbitrated
The lead plaintiff in a proposed class action claiming a nationwide operator of parking garages violates privacy laws with its use of video analytics to enforce phony parking fees is fighting the company's bid in Colorado federal court to force the dispute into arbitration.
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March 31, 2025
Voting Exec Says Defamation Suit Not Fit For Colo. High Court
A former Dominion Voting executive urged Colorado's justices not to hear appeals from a conservative broadcaster and radio host in his defamation suit, saying the defendants haven't made any new dismissal arguments and that "this case is not the case" for the high court to resolve disagreements about state anti-SLAPP law.
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March 31, 2025
Samsung Bid To Beat Back $192M Patent Award Falls Short
Texas U.S. District Judge Rodney Gilstrap unsealed a ruling Friday explaining why he decided that a small Silicon Valley outfit's use of continuations in filing wireless charger patents were not unreasonable delays that made the patents unenforceable or void a $192 million verdict against Samsung.
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March 31, 2025
Nasdaq's Tighter IPO Rules Raise Bar For Small Companies
Nasdaq is seeking to weed out volatile stocks by tightening listing standards for small companies conducting initial public offerings or uplistings, although lawyers caution that new rules could prompt capital-hungry companies to pursue other listing strategies, including reverse mergers.
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March 31, 2025
Buyer Class Of Surgical Robots Is Certified In Antitrust Fight
A California federal judge on Monday certified a class of thousands of hospitals alleging Intuitive Surgical monopolized the market for robotic surgical tools by blocking third-party repairs and tying services to robot purchases, finding the case raises common antitrust questions that can be resolved on a classwide basis.
Expert Analysis
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10 Noteworthy CFPB Developments From 2024
In a banner year for consumer finance regulation, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau made significant strides in its efforts to rein in Big Tech and nonbank financial firms, including via rules regarding open banking, credit card late fees, and buy now, pay later products, say attorneys at Wiley.
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Series
Fixing Up Cars Makes Me A Better Lawyer
From problem-solving to patience and adaptability to organization, the skills developed working under the hood of a car directly translate to being a more effective lawyer, says Christopher Mdeway at Kaufman Dolowich.
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Making The Pitch To Grow Your Company's Legal Team
In a compressed economy, convincing the C-suite to invest in additional legal talent can be a herculean task, but a convincing pitch — supported by metrics and cost analyses — may help in-house counsel justify the growth of their team, say Elizabeth Smith and Roger Garceau at Major Lindsey.
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Musk Pay Fight Shows Investor Approval Isn't Universal Cure
The Delaware Court of Chancery's recent denial of a motion revising its prior rescission of Elon Musk's nearly $56 billion compensation package is a reminder of the heightened standard corporate boards must meet in conflicted controller transactions and that stockholder approval doesn't automatically cure fiduciary wrongdoing, say attorneys at A&O Shearman.
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4 Trade Secret Pointers From 2024's Key IP Law Developments
Four significant 2024 developments in trade secret law yield practical tips about defending trade secrets overseas, proving unjust enrichment claims, forcing compliance with posttrial orders and using restrictive covenants to prevent employee leaks of confidential intellectual property, say attorneys at Faegre Drinker.
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Data Privacy Landscape After Mass. Justices' Wiretap Ruling
In Vita v. New England Baptist Hospital, Massachusetts’ highest court recently ruled that the state’s wiretap law doesn’t prohibit all tracking of website user activity, but major financial and reputational risks remain for businesses that aren't transparent about customer’s web data, says Seth Berman at Nutter.
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Compliance Lessons From Raytheon's FCPA Settlement
A recent Foreign Corrupt Practices Act action involving aerospace and defense company Raytheon underscores the importance of risk management related to retaining and overseeing third parties — especially in higher-risk jurisdictions — and the promotion of a companywide culture of compliance, say attorneys at Debevoise.
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Opinion
Justices Rightly Corrected Course In Nvidia And Facebook
By dismissing both the Nvidia and Facebook class actions, over investors' ability to hold corporations accountable for fraud, the U.S. Supreme Court was right in refusing to favor corporations over transparency, and reaffirmed its commitment to corporate accountability, investor protection and the rule of law, says Laura Posner at Cohen Milstein.
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Gov't Scrutiny Of Workplace Chat Apps Set To Keep Growing
The incoming Trump administration and Republican majorities in Congress are poised to open numerous investigations that include increasing demands for entities to produce communications from workplace chat apps, so companies must evaluate their usage and retention policies, say attorneys at Orrick.
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Del. Dispatch: The 2024 Corporate Cases You Need To Know
The Delaware Court of Chancery in 2024 issued several decisions that some viewed as upending long-standing corporate practices, leading to the amendment of the Delaware General Corporation Law and debates at some Delaware corporations about potentially reincorporating to another state, say attorneys at Fried Frank.
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2024 Regulatory Developments For Bank-Fintech Partnerships
Joseph Silvia at Duane Morris reviews a handful of particularly noteworthy 2024 updates regarding bank-fintech partnerships, including federal banking agencies issuing a number of important pieces of guidance that reiterate and update previous guidance in the area of third-party risk management.
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Unwrapping Retailer AI Risks Amid Holiday Shopping Season
While generative artificial intelligence tools can catalyze game-changing results for retailers looking to stay ahead of the competition during the holiday season, and year-round, it can also bring certain legal risks, including product liability concerns, say attorneys at King & Spalding.
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The Implications Of 2024's AI Rules And Regs For Patent Attys
Christina Huang, John Smith and Devin Stein at Faegre Drinker review this year's new rules and regulations on the development and use of artificial intelligence — from the Biden administration, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, the American Bar Association and various states — as they apply to patent attorneys.
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When US Privilege Law Applies To Docs Made Outside The US
As globalization manifests itself in disputes over foreign-created documents, a California federal court’s recent trademark decision illustrates nuances of both U.S. privilege frameworks and foreign evidentiary protections that attorneys must increasingly bear in mind, say attorneys at Hunton.
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Notable 2024 Trademark Cases And What To Watch In 2025
Emerging disputes between established tech giants and smaller trademark holders promise to test the boundaries of trademark protection in 2025, following a 2024 marked with disputes in areas ranging from cybersquatting to geographic marks, says Danner Kline at Bradley Arant.