Try our Advanced Search for more refined results
Technology
-
January 13, 2025
White House Sets Framework For AI Technology Exports
The Biden administration on Monday took its latest step toward securing artificial intelligence technology, issuing a rule aimed at easing the sale of U.S.-made chips and models to allied countries while restricting access to foreign adversaries that it said could use the systems to threaten national security.
-
January 13, 2025
NY's $15 Broadband Price Cap To Take Effect Wednesday
Internet service providers in New York won't be allowed to charge low-income households more than $15 for basic broadband service come Wednesday, after the U.S. Supreme Court declined to weigh in on a ruling upholding the Empire State's right to cap internet costs.
-
January 13, 2025
Uber Says Colo. Pay Disclosure Law Infringes Free Speech
Uber is suing Colorado state officials in Denver federal court, contending new driver earnings and service fee disclosure requirements violate the First Amendment by forcing commercial speech, adding that they will ultimately mislead the public about how much in fares the company retains.
-
January 13, 2025
T-Mobile, UScellular Say Tie-Up Will 'Greatly' Amp Up Service
T-Mobile and UScellular defended their $4.4 billion deal to combine wireless operations, telling the Federal Communications Commission that expanding the T-Mobile footprint will improve consumers' experiences around the country.
-
January 13, 2025
FCC Monitoring For Wireless Outages Caused By LA Fires
The Federal Communications Commission said Monday it was closely monitoring the effect of the Los Angeles wildfires on telecommunications networks and was granting tentative authority for providers to fill any gaps in service.
-
January 13, 2025
Fed. Circ. Affirms Crypto Exec Doesn't Belong On Mining IP
A Delaware federal judge properly found that a cryptocurrency company's founder shouldn't be added as an inventor onto a rival company's energy consumption patent, the Federal Circuit affirmed Monday.
-
January 13, 2025
CFPB Can't Get $43M Fine From Telemarketing Debt Co. Yet
An Illinois federal judge Friday waited to order the owner of a defunct debt company to pay $43 million for misrepresenting to customers they could eliminate their student loans, pointing to a U.S. Supreme Court decision holding the accused has a right to a jury trial when financial penalties are on the line.
-
January 13, 2025
TDK, NHK Face Certified Classes In Price-Fixing MDL
A California federal judge has certified classes of resellers and end users who allege that electronics manufacturers TDK Corp. and NHK International Corp. fixed prices of certain hard-drive components, rejecting the companies' challenges to the plaintiffs' overcharge damages theories and finding that the claims can be resolved on a classwide basis.
-
January 13, 2025
FTC Says It Has Power To Modify Meta Privacy Order
The Federal Trade Commission has rejected Meta's argument that the agency lacks authority to modify a $5 billion data privacy settlement as the social media giant continues fighting an order barring it from monetizing children's data.
-
January 13, 2025
Mich. Gaming Board Sued Over Efforts To Shutter Betting App
The TwinSpires horse-race betting platform has sued Michigan's gaming authority and other officials for their allegedly unlawful efforts to compel the company to license or shut down the gambling app, arguing its activity is allowed under the Interstate Horseracing Act.
-
January 13, 2025
Ex-State Department, Google Atty Joins King & Spalding
King & Spalding LLP has hired a former Biden administration official with expertise in artificial intelligence policy and content moderation who previously worked in an international criminal tribunal and for the parent company of Google.
-
January 13, 2025
FCC Defends T-Mobile, Sprint Privacy Fine In DC Circ.
The Federal Communications Commission is defending its decision to hit T-Mobile and Sprint with a combined $92 million in fines for selling users' sensitive location data, telling the D.C. Circuit that the wireless carriers could have received a jury trial but were not owed one.
-
January 13, 2025
NJ Firm Agrees To Settle Client's Suit Over Ransomware Attack
New Jersey law firm The Wacks Law Group LLC has reached a settlement agreement with a former client to end a proposed class action claiming that the firm's negligence in properly securing its data led to the theft of hundreds of clients' personal information in a March cyberattack.
-
January 13, 2025
3 Firms Build Clearwater's $1.5B Buy Of Enfusion
Software company Clearwater Analytics on Monday unveiled plans to buy investment management and hedge fund industry-focused software company Enfusion in a $1.5 billion deal built by three law firms.
-
January 13, 2025
Justices Snub Roku Patent Feud Over ITC Power
The U.S. Supreme Court said Monday it will not consider Roku Inc.'s challenge to a ruling that upheld a U.S. International Trade Commission decision blocking the importation of certain streaming products deemed to infringe a Universal Electronics Inc. patent, in a case that targeted the scope of the ITC's authority to issue such orders.
-
January 13, 2025
High Court Won't Scrutinize Huge Class Of Meta Advertisers
The U.S. Supreme Court declined Monday to assess the certification of an enormous class of businesses that social media colossus Meta Platforms allegedly defrauded by inflating the reach of Facebook and Instagram advertisements, upping the odds of a major payout in the closely watched case.
-
January 13, 2025
Justices Won't Weigh Calif. Arbitration Rule In Cable Case
The U.S. Supreme Court declined Monday to review whether federal law preempts a California appeals court rule that says arbitration agreements cannot be used to bar plaintiffs from seeking public injunctive relief.
-
January 13, 2025
Nvidia's Healthcare Ambitions Grow In New Partnerships
Nvidia announced Monday that it has inked four new healthcare partnerships, a move that comes on the first day of the annual J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference in San Francisco.
-
January 10, 2025
Intuitive Rips VP's Credibility In Robo-Surgery Antitrust Trial
An ex-Surgical Instrument Service executive testifying Friday in a federal antitrust trial over claims Intuitive Surgical abuses its market power said hospitals welcomed its service extending an Intuitive surgical robot component's life, but Intuitive's lawyer slammed the executive's credibility by noting his firing over abusing expenses and other concerns.
-
January 10, 2025
4 Lessons For Contractors From The Bitmanagement Saga
A software company's damages award of just $150,000 after years of litigation over the U.S. Navy violating a licensing deal offers several lessons for federal software contractors about carefully negotiating contractual terms and making sure they can adequately enforce those terms.
-
January 10, 2025
Microsoft Pushes To Thwart 'Scheme' To Bypass AI Security
A Virginia federal judge has authorized Microsoft Corp. to seize a website that the tech giant alleges has been instrumental to a "sophisticated scheme" by foreign-based cybercriminals to circumvent safety guardrails built into artificial intelligence services in order to create offensive and harmful content, according to court filings made public Friday.
-
January 10, 2025
Comcast Urges 2nd Win Over Viamedia Market Shutout Claims
Comcast and Viamedia clashed Friday over whether an Illinois federal judge should decide if Comcast's platform connecting spot cable providers to advertisers is a one- or two-sided platform as she determines whether Viamedia's market monopoly claims should go to trial, as the Seventh Circuit once envisioned.
-
January 10, 2025
Feds Back Musk's Microsoft-OpenAI Board Overlap Concerns
The U.S. Department of Justice and Federal Trade Commission weighed in Friday on Elon Musk's California federal lawsuit against OpenAI, arguing that the artificial intelligence research organization and its co-defendant Microsoft can't fight claims of improper board overlap just by saying the overlap has ended.
-
January 10, 2025
PowerSchool Blamed For Breach of Student, Teacher Data
The personal data of tens of millions of students, parents and teachers was put at risk last month when hackers were able to worm their way into PowerSchool's systems because the educational software company's security safeguards were not up to snuff, two lawsuits filed in California federal court allege.
-
January 10, 2025
Plex Says Subscriber's Privacy Lawsuit Must Be Arbitrated
Streaming platform Plex is urging a California federal court to nix a proposed data privacy class action, accusing the plaintiffs of using the litigation as a tactic to "coerce" it into settling more than 400 pending arbitrations.
Expert Analysis
-
7 Pitfalls To Watch In Tech Referral Fee Programs
The recent attempt by FluidStack to recover $10 million in referral fees allegedly promised by software vendor Denvr Dataworks should alert potential participants in so-called partnership programs to seven signs that a proposed technology referral agreement may not equally benefit all sides, says Chris Wlach at Huge Inc.
-
How New Fraud Enforcement Tool Affects Gov't Contractors
Government contractors will likely face greater scrutiny under the recently enacted Administrative False Claims Act, which broadens federal agencies' authority to pursue low-dollar fraud claims, but contractors may also find the act makes settlement of such claims easier to negotiate, say attorneys at Wiley.
-
Takeaways From 2024's Emerging IP Licensing Trends
Themes in intellectual property licensing from the past year – including artificial intelligence; risk management; and name, image and likeness rights – highlight key considerations for navigating an evolving landscape, say attorneys at Ballard Spahr.
-
Top 10 Legal Issues This Year For Transportation Industry GCs
General counsel must carefully consider numerous legal and policy challenges facing the automotive and transportation industry in the year to come, especially while navigating new technologies, regulations and global markets, says Francesco Liberatore at Squire Patton.
-
Exploring Venue Strategy For Trump-Era Regulatory Litigation
Litigation will likely play a prominent role in shaping policy outcomes during the second Trump administration, and stakeholders have several tools at their disposal to steer regulatory litigation toward more favorable venues, say attorneys at Covington.
-
Searching For Insight On Requested Google Chrome Remedy
The potential for Google to divest its Chrome browser — a remedy requested by the Justice Department following a D.C. federal court’s finding the company is a monopolist — has drawn both criticism and endorsement, but legal precedent likely supports the former, say attorneys at Ballard Spahr.
-
How The UPC, ITC Complement Each Other In Patent Law
Attorneys at Ropes & Gray discuss the similarities and differences between the Unified Patent Court and the International Trade Commission, as well as recent matters litigated in both venues and why parties choose to file at these forums.
-
New Year, New Risks: 8 Top Cyber Issues For Finance In 2025
As financial institutions forge ahead in 2025, they must strike a delicate balance between embracing technological innovation and guarding against its darker threats, which this year could include everything from supply chain vulnerabilities to deepfakes, say attorneys at Baker Donelson.
-
FTC Focus: A Changing Of The Guard
While rigorous antitrust enforcement is unlikely to slow down at the Federal Trade Commission, the focus will undoubtedly change, including when it comes to Big Tech, as Andrew Ferguson prepares to take the reins from Chair Lina Khan, say attorneys at Proskauer.
-
5th Circ.'s Nasdaq Ruling Another Piece In DEI Policy Puzzle
The Fifth Circuit's recent en banc opinion vacating Nasdaq's board diversity listing rule wades into the hotly debated topic of diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives at a time when many public companies are navigating the attention that DEI commitments are drawing from activists and shareholders, say attorneys at Debevoise.
-
Series
Playing Esports Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Competing in a global esports tournament at Wimbledon last year not only fulfilled my childhood dream, but also sharpened skills that are essential to my day job, including strategic thinking, confidence and networking, says AJ Schuyler at Jackson Lewis.
-
Lessons From The SEC's 2024 Crackdown On AI Washing
AI washing was the subject of increased scrutiny from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in 2024 following a surge in the commercial adoption of generative artificial intelligence technologies in 2023, highlighting the importance of transparency, accuracy and accountability when communicating about AI, say attorneys at Perkins Coie.
-
The 6 Most Significant FCRA Litigation Developments Of 2024
From a key sovereign immunity decision at the U.S. Supreme Court to a ruling on creditworthiness out of the Seventh Circuit, several important Fair Credit Reporting Act cases wound their way through the courts in 2024, each offering takeaways for both plaintiffs and defendants, say attorneys at Shipkevich.
-
Identifying Deepfakes During Evidence Collection, Discovery
Excerpt from Practical Guidance
Attorneys must familiarize themselves with the tools used to create and detect deepfakes — media manipulated by artificial intelligence to convincingly mimic real people and events — as well as best practices for keeping this fabricated evidence out of court, says Bijan Ghom at Saxton & Stump.
-
Fed. Circ. In December: A Patent Prosecution History Lesson
Despite relying on two rock-solid principles of patent law, DDR lost its Federal Circuit case against Priceline.com, highlighting how a change in the scope of the invention from the provisional to the nonprovisional application can affect the court's analysis of how a skilled artisan would understand claim terms after reading the prosecution history, say attorneys at Knobbe Martens.