0 results for 'Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation'
O'Melveny & Myers Reports Strong Revenue and Income Growth in 2016
In Asia, the 648-lawyer firm saw several departures across offices last year, but chair Brad Butwin says his firm remains committed to the region.Slep-Tone Entertainment Corporation v. Wired for Sound Karaoke and DJ Services, LLC
William Edlund, Bay Area Litigator and Bar Leader, Dies at 87
Edlund, who practiced at Pillsbury and Bartko Zankel Bunzel & Tarrant, continued trying cases into his 80s.Hollywood Shuts Down 'Filtering Service' in Copyright Battle
A Utah-based startup that streams movies after filtering out profanity, violence and other objectionable content has vowed to take a copyright battle against Hollywood all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court.Lieb v. Korangy Publishing, Inc.
FAC's Amendment Denied; Proposed Claims Filed After Deadline, 'Good Cause' Not ShownView more book results for the query "Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation"
Why Famed Litigator David Quinto Became a Startup GC
Prominent Los Angeles litigator David Quinto is opening up about what led him to quit Davis Wright Tremaine to become the first-ever general counsel of an obscure startup in Utah called VidAngel.The Dangers in Unpaid Interns: Employers Beware!
What employers can do to avoid claims by interns alleging misclassification and seeking compensation and overtime pay for their services.Quinn Emanuel Co-Founder Joins Embattled Video Filtering Startup as GC
David Quinto, a co-founding partner of Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan who joined Davis Wright Tremaine's Los Angeles office a year ago, is on the move again.Quinn Emanuel Co-Founder Joins Embattled Video Filtering Startup as GC
VidAngel, which helps customers censor sex, profanity and other material in streaming movies, has hired veteran litigator David Quinto as its first general counsel.Courts Apply Different Analyses to Use of Real People in Fiction
In their Entertainment Law column, Neil J. Rosini and Michael I. Rudell write: "'Sarver v. Chartier' and 'Hicks v. Casablanca Records' present relatively straightforward guidelines for deciding whether fictional works portraying real people violate publicity rights. New York decisions, however, usually apply statutory interpretation that seems to depend on whether readers and viewers know what they're reading or watching is fiction or fact."Revenue, Profit, Cash: Managing Law Firms for Success
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Law Firm Operational Considerations for the Corporate Transparency Act
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The Ultimate Guide to Remote Legal Work
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Practical Guidance Journal: Protecting Work Product in a Generative AI World
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