By Riley Brennan | March 1, 2024
This complaint was first surfaced by Law.com Radar.
By Allison Dunn | January 5, 2024
The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court is considering whether Uber's pop-up screen gave reasonable notice of the rideshare company's updated terms that would limit a registered rider's $63 million damages claim to arbitration after he suffered paralyzing injuries in a crash.
By Colleen Murphy | July 19, 2023
The case was first surfaced by Law.com Radar.
By Isha Marathe | July 17, 2023
Each year, more cases in U.S. courts treat emojis as legally binding. However, giving the same weight to emojis as one would give to signatures comes with its own set of security concerns, and increased ambiguity.
By Allison Dunn | February 9, 2023
Finding courts in the First Circuit have yet to address the framework for determining whether online terms were sufficiently disclosed to provide a consent defense to a Telephone Consumer Protection Act, the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts relied on recent Ninth Circuit case law in allowing a putative class action to proceed.
By Cassandre Coyer | January 26, 2023
Broad-reaching AI regulations could eventually come down the pipeline. But in the meantime, many clients are contractually mandating their AI companies to take steps to address the risk of bias.
By Brenda Sapino Jeffreys | November 29, 2022
Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld sued Xcential Corp. of California, alleging it misappropriated trade secrets related to software for writing federal bills, but the defendant responded by denying allegations and filing counterclaims.
Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Scott Graham | September 1, 2022
Morrison & Foerster and Young Conaway Stargatt & Taylor argue on behalf of Arm Ltd. that Qualcomm must destroy technology that Nuvia Inc. developed using Arm's processor architecture.
By Scott Graham | June 15, 2022
An Oakland federal jury also awarded $24 million against Hewlett Packard Enterprise for intentionally interfering with Oracle's contractual relationships. Oracle had accused HPE of working with a customer support subcontractor, Terix Computer Co., that was illegally copying and distributing updates to Oracle's Solaris software.
By Dan Packel | May 23, 2022
Legal industry veteran Howard Rosenberg was a co-founder of Decipher. After he joined Baretz+Brunelle in February to launch a new lateral intelligence service, his former partner Michael Ellenhorn sent a cease and desist order. Now the fight has made it to court.
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