By Adolfo Pesquera | March 5, 2024
"The government mandated the collection of a wealth of proprietary and sensitive information, singling out one industry for political reasons," plaintiffs' co-chair Chris Davis said.
By Scott Graham | June 17, 2021
The PTO kept sending mail to an incorrectly provided street address, even though it had an email, a telephone number and a unique customer identifier it could have cross-checked. Judge Leonie Brinkema ruled that it was likely arbitrary and capricious for the PTO to withdraw a patent application under those circumstances.
By Joseph G. Poluka and David J. Oberly | February 18, 2021
In-house attorneys and other executives are not immune from criminal liability and can be targeted for criminal prosecution for actions taken in connection with corporate matters.
By Scott Graham | January 14, 2021
Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr's Mark Selwyn told Judge Ed Davila on Thursday that Apple, Cisco, Google, Intel and Edwards Lifesciences are trying to "reinvigorate" the America Invents Act, while an inventor group seeking to intervene would shut it down. The inventors say they want a seat at the table when it comes to AIA rules.
By Scott Graham | July 1, 2020
Some aggressive nonpracticing entities—and perhaps growing interest in litigation funding—have put 2020 district court filings 16% ahead of the previous six months' pace.
By Scott Graham | June 16, 2020
With district judges forced to put jury trials on hold, the Patent Trial and Appeal Board sounds as if it will be more assertive about deciding patent validity, even when the same issues are presented in parallel district court proceedings.
By Sarah M. Lucey, Shute, Mihaly & Weinberger | June 4, 2020
A recent California Supreme Court decision offers a bright line rule for a crucial issue in the case: What agency processes do, and do not, qualify as "data extraction," the costs of which agencies may permissibly shift to requesters?
By C. Ryan Barber | September 17, 2019
In recent weeks, questions have emerged over whether the Justice Department has encroached on the FTC, specifically with regard to Facebook.
By Cheryl Miller | July 24, 2019
Federal regulators say Curaleaf made unsubstantiated medical claims about the cannabidiol, or CBD, products on its website and on social media.
By ALM Staff | March 28, 2019
"Just because a process to deliver advertising is opaque and complex doesn't mean that [it] exempts Facebook and others from our scrutiny and the law of the land," HUD's general counsel said in a statement.
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