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."
By Linda A. Thompson | March 15, 2021
A flurry of app developers have accused the US tech giant of anti-competitive practices and asked the EU's competition authority to right the alleged wrongs of the App Store.
By Victoria Hudgins | February 8, 2021
Maintaining jurors' undivided attention during in-person trials can be tricky in a virtual environment. But where legal tech companies see an opportunity, judges may see an unneeded solution.
By Pearl Wu | Zach Warren | January 27, 2021
Legalweek is seeking nominations from lawyers who have handled cutting edge matters at the intersection of the law and technology.
By Scott Graham | December 14, 2020
The second Sidley partner to join the firm in the last few months, Ted Chandler said he will work for the firm in Los Angeles and San Francisco.
By Rhys Dipshan | December 11, 2020
The San Francisco-based legal research company has stopped accepting customers this week, and will cease offering its platform by the end of January. But ROSS CEO Andrew M.J. Arruda said the company plans a comeback should it prevail in its legal battle with Thomson Reuters.
By Scott Graham | December 7, 2020
A Federal Circuit panel sounded as if it disagreed with U.S. District Judge George Wu about the eligibility of patents BlackBerry is asserting against the social network and against Snap. But BlackBerry will still have to overcome PTO invalidity rulings to fully restart its case.
By Tom McParland | November 30, 2020
An app developer alleged that MLB's tech arm fraudulently entered a nonexclusive contract for STA to develop an in-game app that allowed users to earn points by predicting the outcome of events in baseball games.
By Victoria Hudgins | November 24, 2020
COVID-19 delivered an unprecedented demand for IT services during the early months of lockdowns. But after sympathy and empathy initially softened complaints, IT providers said patience has grown thin.
By Scott Graham | November 2, 2020
A federal judge has ruled that Massachusetts' Uniform Trade Secrets Act does not preclude an AI startup from bringing separate claims of unfair competition and tortious interference based on the same alleged misappropriation underlying its trade secret claims.
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