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March 04, 2020 | The Recorder

Judge Scolds LA Litigator in Fight over Blade Runner Flying Car Deal

A federal judge called out the founder of Santa Monica-based Anderson Ye for filing a 159-page complaint (plus an additional 72 pages of exhibits) calling it "needlessly repetitive and lengthy, with pages of unnecessary background and irrelevant details."
5 minute read
February 07, 2020 | New York Law Journal

What Lanham Act Liability Do Retailers Face for Stocking and Selling Mislabeled Third-Party Products?

Surprisingly, there are few cases that have considered liability of retailers who sell products with (allegedly) false or misleading labels under the Lanham Act, or who engage in other promotional acts related to third-party products. Recently, however, two cases have addressed these issues in the context of both brick-and-mortar and online retail outlets.
11 minute read
January 13, 2020 | Supreme Court Brief

Today's ERISA Case: 'An Abstract (Yet Costly) Dispute' | Former Clerks Prepare for January Argument Cycle | Reflections on Stevens

Thanks for reading Supreme Court Brief. Scroll down to see some of the lawyers set to argue in the coming weeks at the high court. Plus: the justices returned Monday to ERISA, for the third time this term. Harvard Law Review's posted recollections of the late Justice John Paul Stevens.
9 minute read
December 13, 2019 | Litigation Daily

And the LOTW Runners Up...

Honorable mention goes to lawyers from Quinn Emanuel; Cleary Gottlieb; Kirkland & Ellis; O'Melveny & Myers and Sidley Austin.
2 minute read
December 12, 2019 | Law.com

Labor of Law: SCOTUS Docket Watch—Does Excessive Fines Clause Apply to Corporations? | Ex-FBI Lawyer Lisa Page Sues | California Arbitration Law Challenged | Who Got the Work

Welcome to Labor of Law—We're spotlighting an under-the-radar workers' compensation insurance case at the US Supreme Court that asks: Does the excessive fines clause apply to corporations? Plus, embattled ex-FBI lawyer Lisa Page hires an Arnold & Porter team, and Netflix is barred from poaching Fox execs. Thanks for reading!
9 minute read
Law Journal Press | Digital Book Land Use Law: Zoning in the 21st Century Authors: Brent Denzin, Julie A. Tappendorf, Adam Simon, David S. Silverman, Gregory W. Jones, Daniel J. Bolin View this Book

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December 09, 2019 | New York Law Journal

The DOJ Moves To Terminate the Paramount Consent Decrees: Is This the End of the Movie Industry as We Know It?

In their Antitrust Trade and Practice column, Karen Hoffman Lent and Kenneth Schwartz discuss the legal implications stemming from the DOJ's decision to ask a federal district court to terminate the Paramount Consent Decrees, a set of rules governing major film studios for the last 70 years.
9 minute read
December 01, 2017 | New York Law Journal

Ninth Circuit Allows Fox to Use 'Empire' Despite Prior Use by Record Company

Entertainment Law columnists Michael I. Rudell and Neil J. Rosini discuss a recent decision which addressed the question: What distinguishes a First Amendment-protected use of that pre-existing mark from an actionable infringement?
8 minute read
November 15, 2017 | The Recorder

Wilson Sonsini Invests in New Sexual Harassment Reporting App

AllVoices, a startup that seeks to help employees bypass their human resources departments to report sexual misconduct in the workplace, has received funding from the Am Law 100 firm and several other investors.
17 minute read
August 01, 2017 | The Recorder

Is Tech Mogul's Row With Movie Studios Another Waymo v. Uber?

Silicon Valley tech entrepreneur Stephen Perlman says a former employee absconded with cutting-edge special effects technology and sold it to a rival. Sound familiar?
19 minute read
July 25, 2017 | The Recorder

Paramount's 'Genisys,' Fox's 'Deadpool' Latest Targets of Rearden Suits Over Visual FX Tech

What do Arnold Schwarzenegger, the Beast of "Beauty and the Beast" fame and the raunchiest and richest movie superhero ever have in common? They're all characters in movies that are named in a growing series of recent suits filed by San Mateo visual effects firm Rearden Inc., which is owned by Silicon Valley entrepreneur Steve Perlman.
6 minute read

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