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Justices Wary of Microsoft's Bid to Void Patent
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday seemed reluctant to make it easier to challenge the validity of patents.Antitrust Views of Roberts, Alito Are Still Unclear
The U.S. Supreme Court is blitzing the country's antitrust laws. Three major antitrust opinions were decided last term, and two new cases were argued last week.Microsoft Patent Case May Not Compute With High Court
The U.S. Supreme Court on April 18 seemed reluctant to make it easier to challenge the validity of patents. At the same time, some justices raised concerns about too many "bad" patents in the marketplace and a federal patent office too overwhelmed "to separate the sheep from the goats," in the words of Justice Stephen Breyer.Dickstein Shapiro Expands IP Practice, Plans to Open Silicon Valley Office
Dickstein Shapiro Expands IP Practice on West Coast With 4 New Hires
Dickstein Shapiro is expanding its intellectual property practice on the West Coast with a new deputy practice leader in Los Angeles, Robert Dickerson of Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe, three other Orrick lawyers, and plans to open an office in Silicon Valley within a few months.View more book results for the query "3M Company"
Microsoft Patent Case May Not Compute With High Court
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday seemed reluctant to make it easier to challenge the validity of patents. At the same time, some justices raised concerns about too many "bad" patents in the marketplace and a federal patent office too overwhelmed "to separate the sheep from the goats," in the words of Justice Stephen Breyer.Vaunted Legal Scholar Switches Sides in Supreme Court Patent Case
One of the nation's top IP law scholars has switched sides in a Supreme Court case that could decide how patents are granted. Mark Lemley, a Stanford University professor, initially asked the high court to hear KSR International Co. v. Teleflex Inc. But last month, he filed a brief asking the Court to take no action in the case, which is scheduled for oral argument on Tuesday. It's extremely rare, say observers, for a practitioner to change positions in a high court case. Why did Lemley do it?Dickstein Shapiro Expands West Coast IP Practice With Four New Hires
The push includes the addition of a new deputy practice leader in Los Angeles and immediate plans to open an office in Silicon Valley.