By Mike Scarcella | March 1, 2021
"[T]he effect of a request to seal this information is tantamount to a request to issue a secret order," U.S. District Judge Kenneth Bell in the Western District of North Carolina, a former McGuireWoods partner, said in his recent order requiring disclosure of rates and other records.
By Zack Needles | Karen Sloan | February 26, 2021
In this week's episode, Winston & Strawn partner Michael Tomasulo and associate DaWanna McCray join Law.com intellectual property reporter Scott Graham to talk about a high-stakes patent showdown between Fortress Investment Group and Intel Corp. in the Western District of Texas.
By Scott Graham | February 19, 2021
Apple is arguing to Judge Robert Schroeder and Intel to Judge Alan Albright that the imminent widespread availability of vaccines favors delay till spring or summer of high-stakes showdowns.
By Scott Graham | January 26, 2021
An infringement case over the once popular but now discontinued Steam video game controller pits Manatt, Phelps & Phillips against Shook, Hardy & Bacon in an all-remote format.
By Michael A. Mora | November 17, 2020
"The uncertainty of trial is a pressure point you lose as a plaintiff to resolve cases early," said Jon Waldrop, the managing partner at Kasowitz Benson Torres' Silicon Valley office. "It makes it even more complicated with patent cases."
By Meredith Hobbs | October 15, 2020
"The biologics stakes are increasing rapidly. All of big pharma is investing in this," said Brian O'Reilly, one of three partners joining Kilpatrick from DLA Piper.
By Scott Graham | September 9, 2020
In a dispute over payment verification patents, the firm is calling on the Supreme Court to declare that the 12 regional Federal Reserve Banks are part of the U.S. government, not private corporations.
By Scott Graham | December 4, 2019
The ride-hailing company says that an inventor who was seeking $584 million in damages should have known the game was up once the Patent Trial and Appeal Board found his patent claims indefinite.
By Angela Morris | November 12, 2019
Tyler Technologies Inc., the company that operates e-filing systems in Texas, Georgia, California, Florida and 17 other states, was sued for patent infringement by a company that's hit 17 other companies with lawsuits since 2018.
By Scott Graham | October 23, 2019
The decision aligns the judge with the Patent Trial and Appeal Board, and likely spells the end of a retired professor's suit against the ride-hailing company.
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