By Scott Graham | April 26, 2022
Attorneys on the case had been self-testing daily, and two of them came up positive on Tuesday. Judge Alan Albright postponed the trial until the fall.
By Scott Graham | April 25, 2022
VLSI won a $2.175 billion verdict the first time around, while Intel secured a defense verdict in the second. This time Wilmer's Bill Lee is telling jurors from the outset that VLSI paid 'only' $35 million for a 170-patent portfolio that includes the asserted patent.
By Scott Graham | February 9, 2022
The Federal Circuit rules 2-1 that the San Francisco judge abused his discretion by ordering Uniloc to disclose license deals with 109 third parties. Alsup had argued that because Uniloc's power to exclude is conferred by government-issued patents, the public has a strong interest in knowing the terms and conditions involved in Uniloc's exercise of its patent rights.
By Scott Graham | February 4, 2022
The university will have to try again on damages after having won $1.1 billion in its first trial. But it's now locked in findings of infringement and validity, which will also give a boost to Caltech cases asserting the same patents against Dell, HP and others.
By Meghann M. Cuniff | November 24, 2021
➤➤ PACER fees have long been a source of complaint, but a JAMS neutral working as a special master in the proposed class action over Facebook's Cambridge…
By Scott Graham | November 22, 2021
Singapore-based SinCo Technologies accused China's Xingke Electronics of using SinCo's name, marks and employees to divert away its business with the likes of Apple and Google.
By Meghann M. Cuniff | November 10, 2021
Welcome back to What's Next, where we bring you the latest on the intersection of law and technology. Here's what's on…
By Hugo Guzman | July 27, 2021
The FBI reported a 400% increase in cyberattacks in 2020, and Property Casualty 360 is warning that work-from-home technologies have unexpected vulnerabilities.
By Scott Graham | June 10, 2021
A newly formed Nevada LLC that swears it isn't affiliated with the tech giant is asking the USPTO to review the validity of two patents that were at issue in a Texas trial last February. The LLC's attorney says the PTO shouldn't allow billions to be awarded on patents that haven't been thoroughly reviewed for validity.
By Scott Graham | April 21, 2021
VLSI was seeking nearly $3 billion on top of the $2.175 billion verdict it won earlier this year. But this time a jury found that Intel did not infringe the VLSI patents, handing a win to Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr.
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