Delaware Business Court Insider
By Rhys Dipshan | May 7, 2020
A day after Thomson Reuters accused ROSS Intelligence of copyright infringement, ROSS denied any allegation that its use of a third party to obtain case law information constituted any illicit acts.
Delaware Business Court Insider
By Scott Graham | April 8, 2020
Unified Patents's Q1 Patent Dispute Report shows that a district in Texas is closing in on the top spot for patent infringement litigation—and it's not the Eastern district.
Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Scott Graham | March 27, 2020
U.S. District Judge Maryellen Noreika held Soto Massini's CEO personally liable for a $2.9 million judgment over infringing shoe designs while finding the case exceptional. But an attorney fee award will be limited, because Gavrieli Brands 'over-litigated' the case.
Delaware Business Court Insider
By Scott Graham | March 18, 2020
If you wanted to create the most infuriating possible "patent troll" narrative, this Delaware case would be hard to top. But a few other factors are worth considering, says IP Reporter Scott Graham.
Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Scott Graham | February 24, 2020
Three partners under age 43 shared all of the speaking roles in a trial over tire pressure monitors that's been 20 years in the making.
Delaware Business Court Insider
By Scott Graham | February 11, 2020
Weil Gotshal pilots licensee CareDx to a rare eligibility finding for a medical diagnostics patent.
Delaware Business Court Insider
By Scott Graham | January 24, 2020
Marilyn Hall Patel, former chief judge of the Northern District of California, and Dechert's Katherine Helm discuss supporting women in intellectual property and finding advocates in unlikely places.
Delaware Business Court Insider
By Scott Graham | December 19, 2019
Delaware federal court Chief Judge Leonard Stark had found some of IV's conduct "exceptional," but said the case overall was not. The Federal Circuit ruled Thursday that while a single act of misconduct can support a fee award under the Patent Act, a district judge still must consider the context of the entire case.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Rob Maier | November 26, 2019
Declaratory judgment actions, commonly referred to as "DJ actions," have historically provided a mechanism for companies threatened with a patent infringement claim to preemptively file a lawsuit seeking a court ruling declaring the patent invalid or not infringed. These DJ actions for years had been a popular tool for accused infringers, but as Rob Maier discusses in this edition of his Patent and Trademark Law column, recent changes in the patent litigation landscape have resulted in a shift away from these DJ actions, and a corresponding shift in the way patent holders approach infringers.
Delaware Business Court Insider
By Scott Graham | October 25, 2019
On behalf of San Jose electronics company Power Integrations, Fish's same core team soldiered through multiple high-dollar jury awards, an initial setback at the Federal Circuit eventually overruled by the Supreme Court, and the successful appeal of adverse PTAB decisions.
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