By Zach Warren | September 26, 2018
ICANN's working on some new rules, but until they're finalized, intellectual property holders and law enforcement have had a tough time getting information on bad actor website owners.
By Dan Clark | September 17, 2018
The EU's attempt to create copyright laws for the internet age has companies and technologists panicking. Here's what law departments should take away.
By Caroline Spiezio | June 21, 2018
The directive, which passed the EU's Legal Affairs Committee this week and is slated to move to an EU Parliament vote in the future, could introduce additional costs and force legal departments to closely monitor content.
By Scott Graham | June 6, 2018
During Wednesday's appellate showdown with rival Arista Networks, the networking giant repeatedly invoked the court's controversial copyrightability case.
By Samantha Joseph | June 1, 2018
The suit stems from a 2008 agreement with Googles, a children's programming company.
By Scott Graham | May 23, 2018
U.S. District Judge Beth Labson Freeman of the Northern District of California ruled that Cisco's copyright suit combined with GC Mark Chandler's blog posts were enough to get by summary judgment.
By Stephanie Forshee | May 17, 2018
If legal fights in the online dating industry are any indication, Facebook's legal department would be smart to strategize about its inroads into this new line of business.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Scott D. Locke and Laura-Michelle Horgan | May 4, 2018
Recently and to the likely dismay of many foreign broadcasters, in 'Spanski Enterprises v. Telewizja Polska' the D.C. Circuit took up an issue of first impression for the federal appellate courts: whether any extraterritorial limits of the copyright law would relieve the liability of foreign content disseminators that send their content into the United States.
By Scott Graham | April 23, 2018
Ninth Circuit Judges Carlos Bea and N. Randy Smith said an en banc panel of the court ought to reconsider whether animals ever have standing to bring claims.
By Caroline Spiezio | April 5, 2018
"There is growing concern that without an approach that ensures that customers own key patents to their new solutions, tech companies will use the knowledge to enter their customer's market and compete against them—perhaps even using the IP that customers helped create," CLO Brad Smith wrote in a blog post.
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