By Samantha Joseph | Daily Business Review | October 18, 2017
The case started as a dispute over unpaid legal fees.
By Ross Todd | The Recorder | October 17, 2017
SAN FRANCISCO—Twitter Inc. has missed on an early attempt to knock out claims that it misled investors about the growth of its daily user base during…
By Ross Todd | October 11, 2017
SAN JOSE — A lawyer representing two former male Yahoo Inc. employees faced a string of skeptical questions Wednesday afternoon from the judge overseeing…
By Ross Todd | October 10, 2017
Yahoo Inc. is set to ask a federal judge in San Jose Wednesday to knock out claims from two former managers in the company's media unit who claim they were discriminated against based on gender.
By Jenna Greene | August 14, 2017
“I've never seen anything like this in 37 years of practice.” That's how Sidley Austin chair Carter Phillips describes the way his client Sprint got off the hook for a $32 million patent infringement judgment last week
By Elizabeth Lampert | July 12, 2017
PR 101 would advise anyone in crisis that addressing the media quickly is imperative. It's not ideal Donald Trump Jr.'s story rapidly changed, but in short order, he leapfrogged the New York Times to get his message out there--and that counts.
By Amanda Bronstad | July 7, 2017
When class members are owed a few pennies from a settlement, how much should you bother trying to make sure they get paid? That's the question before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit in a petition to reverse a $5.5 million settlement with Google Inc. over privacy claims that gives money to the plaintiffs' attorneys and six nonprofit organizations but nothing to the class. On Wednesday, attorneys general from 11 states filed an amicus brief insisting that the Delaware judge who approved the settlement didn't go far enough in attempting to put class members above the use of cy pres, a controversial practice used to distributed unclaimed funds in a settlement to third parties.
By Ross Todd | July 6, 2017
A federal judge in Oakland has turned back the Justice Department's request to end Twitter's lawsuit seeking to publish information about the number of requests it receives as part of national security investigations.
By Scott Graham | July 3, 2017
U.S. District Judge Rodney Gilstrap would allow suits to stay in the Eastern District of Texas even if a defendant has no physical presence there.
By Jenna Greene | May 19, 2017
A team from Kirkland & Ellis led by partner Craig Primis persuaded a federal judge in New York to toss a pair of suits alleging that Facebook Inc. supports terrorist organizations by allowing the groups to use its platform.
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