Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Scott Graham | February 12, 2021
Millions of dollars—maybe even a billion—are on the line in Fortress-Intel showdown, as Albright ups courtroom safety precautions and lawyers from all over the country try to get a fix on patent trials in the most popular new venue.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Rob Maier | January 26, 2021
Despite the recession—or partly as a result of it—2020 was also a year of growth for patent litigation in the United States. In this edition of his Patent and Trademark Law column, Rob Maier provides a look back at patent litigation filing statistics in recent years across district courts in the United States, with an eye towards current trends that in all likelihood will continue deep into 2021.
Delaware Business Court Insider | Q&A
By Ross Todd | January 25, 2021
"When you are number one, you want to stay number one, and that means constantly improving how we service clients and how we help them meet their business objectives."
Delaware Business Court Insider
By Scott Graham | January 4, 2021
Led by a resurgence from nonpracticing entities, district court filings were up for the first time since 2017.
Delaware Business Court Insider
By Scott Graham | December 29, 2020
With two potentially seismic cases at the Supreme Court and an extra year's worth of cases ready for trial, 2021 is shaping up as a headline-making year for IP litigation.
Delaware Business Court Insider
By Scott Graham | December 28, 2020
There's no consensus yet at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit for converting telephone arguments to video. But Judge Todd Hughes has been advocating both publicly and in informal discussions with his colleagues for a couple of years to televise arguments, and he says a few of his colleagues are warming to the idea.
Delaware Business Court Insider
By Scott Graham | December 21, 2020
Judge Leonard Stark ruled that Cirba Inc. didn't have standing to appear at trial and complain that VMWare was trying to squeeze it out of the virtualization market, because its affiliate Cirba IP actually held the relevant patents.
Delaware Business Court Insider
By Scott Graham | December 11, 2020
Asked at a conference about upcoming trials in January, the Western District of Texas judge says "we are going to take even additional steps to make things safe over what we did before."
Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Scott Graham | November 25, 2020
Judges in Houston, Delaware and Chicago have recently postponed patent trials that were scheduled for November, though in one instance the reason wasn't related to COVID-19.
Delaware Business Court Insider
By Alaina Lancaster | November 24, 2020
Space Data contends that during the course of arbitration with Hosie Rice, the firm "pocketed" funds from its trust account allocated for paying vendors used to support the intellectual property claims against Google. The arbitration came to a sudden conclusion, according to the filing, after JAMS determined the arbitrator, retired Delaware federal court Judge Sue Robinson, no longer had jurisdiction in the case.
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