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January 12, 2007 |

Cisco lawsuit against Apple over iPhone naming rights could get ugly

SAN FRANCISCO AP - What's a name worthTo find out, Cisco Systems Inc. and Apple Inc. may spend millions of dollars in a high-stakes legal battle - and the winner could walk away with the rights to the coveted name "iPhone."In a lawsuit filed Wednesday, Cisco asked a judge to forbid Apple from using the name "iPhone," a Cisco trademark since 2000.
6 minute read
November 04, 2002 |

Civil Actions

3 minute read
March 11, 2003 |

News Briefs

A roundup of legal news items.
3 minute read
June 26, 2002 |

Denying an Injury Claim Due to a Positive Drug Test

Imagine the following hypothetical: It is 10 a.m. and an employee limps into his supervisor`s office, bleeding profusely from his hand. The employee informs the supervisor that he accidentally caught his hand in a dangerous piece of machinery at his workstation. The employee is immediately sent to the emergency room, where he receives 15 stitches and is informed that the laceration caused severe nerve damage to his hand. Additionally, per company policy, the employee submits to a post-accident drug screen.
7 minute read
October 13, 2008 |

Understanding Dramatically Different IP Laws in Asian Countries

For decades, the first foray abroad for most American businesses was Europe, where intellectual property laws and IP protection rights closely parallel the U.S. system. What's more, in Europe, a company can invest in multiple countries and yet usually confront only one set of IP concerns. In short, U.S. and European IP laws are consistent and continue to evolve in meeting the needs of businesses and the challenges of new technologies.
8 minute read
March 02, 2009 |

What's Next for Samuel Kent in Wake of Guilty Plea?

In September 2008, U.S. District Judge Samuel B. Kent of the Southern District of Texas spoke loudly and forcefully when entering a not guilty plea to sex abuse charges. But last week in a Houston courtroom his tone was markedly different as a clearly beaten Kent whispered "guilty" to an obstruction-of-justice charge. Kent's decision to plead guilty to the obstruction charge will cost him any chance at a standard judicial retirement salary and most likely his bar card and freedom, five experts say.
15 minute read
July 20, 2010 |

PEOPLE IN THE NEWS

Tom Duffy, managing partner of Philadelphia-based Duffy & Partners, will take part in the Atlantic City Airshow next month in a B-25 Mitchell Bomber named "Take Off Time," one of about a dozen war birds from his private collection. Earlier this year he flew the plane in a re-created flyover of the 1942 "Doolittle Raid" at the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force in Dayton, Ohio.
4 minute read
December 07, 2006 |

President Bush's 'Lost Opportunity' For the 4th Circuit

Chief Judge William Wilkins, who has presided over the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the past four years, sent President George W. Bush a letter last week announcing his plans to step down in June.
2 minute read

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