By Ross Todd | May 24, 2021
U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers has often found herself as the only minority or woman with a speaking role in the tech-heavy antitrust cases she's overseen. The Epic Games v. Apple trial has been different on the front, and the judge has noticed.
By Dan Clark | May 19, 2021
A former Wilson Sonsini associate who is now general counsel at a software company says midlevel associates are a perfect match for early startups.
By Scott Graham | May 17, 2021
Friedman, Suder & Cooke's Jonathan Suder and Glenn Orman piloted ADASA Inc. to a win over Avery Dennison Corp. in Eugene, Oregon.
By Charles Toutant | May 10, 2021
A special master in the case said IQVIA "made a prima facie showing that Veeva was engaging or intended to engage in a crime or fraud at the time the DataDestroyed Spreadsheet was created and that the DataDestroyed Spreadsheet was used in furtherance of the alleged crime or fraud–namely, the spoliation of evidence."
By Scott Graham | April 23, 2021
Google's Supreme Court advocate and amici curiae on both sides analyzed the meta-reasoning in Google v. Oracle at a Berkeley Center for Law and Technology webinar.
By Scott Graham | April 14, 2021
Partner Sean Pak says his team trusted jurors to understand complex AI technology and took care to fully integrate local counsel into the trial over digitized key duplication.
By Katheryn Tucker | April 7, 2021
"In the context of software applications, the dichotomy between patentable concrete ideas and unpatentable abstract ideas typically turns on whether the patent is directed to 'an improvement in the functioning of a computer,' which is patentable," said Judge Sean Jordan, who ruled this claim was not.
By Scott Graham | April 6, 2021
U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema said the Artificial Intelligence Project is raising "a fascinating argument" about who can be named as an inventor on a patent, but that it would be best addressed to Congress.
By Scott Graham | April 5, 2021
The Supreme Court's first fair use decision in more than a decade helps to clarify several enduring copyright questions regarding software use, experts say.
By Scott Graham | April 5, 2021
The Supreme Court justices rule 6-2 that Google used only the amount of Oracle code necessary to transform Java into "a highly creative and innovative tool for a smartphone environment."
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