By Cheryl Miller | December 2, 2019
Software developers, bankers, insurers and other business representatives continue to complain that the new rules are too vague and cumbersome.
By Scott Graham | December 2, 2019
A three-judge panel sounded highly skeptical of U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh's decision to certify a nationwide consumer class based on California antitrust law. But they suggested that a California only class—or California plus a handful of other states—might pass muster.
By Ross Todd | November 21, 2019
A Ninth Circuit panel held that viewers of the 2015 boxing match between Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao had "no cognizable claim" stemming from Pacquiao's failure to disclose a shoulder injury suffered in the run-up to the fight.
By Alaina Lancaster | November 5, 2019
The suit, which began in 2015, alleged that the telecommunications company slowed data speeds despite the fact that customers had purchased unlimited mobile data plans.
By Scott Graham | October 25, 2019
On behalf of San Jose electronics company Power Integrations, Fish's same core team soldiered through multiple high-dollar jury awards, an initial setback at the Federal Circuit eventually overruled by the Supreme Court, and the successful appeal of adverse PTAB decisions.
By Alaina Lancaster | October 25, 2019
Judge Brian Walsh of Santa Clara Superior Court wrote that he was not persuaded YouTube's unrestricted mode and advertising platform "are freely open to the public or are the functional equivalent of a traditional public forum like a town square or a central business district."
By Alaina Lancaster | October 23, 2019
House Financial Services Committee members repeatedly asked for confirmation that Facebook and Libra will wait for the approval of U.S. regulators to bring the product to market.
By Alaina Lancaster | October 18, 2019
Activist Omar Abdulaziz claims Twitter failed to safeguard his user information, such as a Twitter password, private email address and telephone number, in August 2013, when the company hired Al Zabarah, when the Kingdom of Saudia Arabia allegedly hired to dig up intelligence on Abdulaziz and his connections.
By Simon Taylor | September 24, 2019
The EU's Court of Justice has ruled that search engines such as Google do not have to remove links beyond Europe's borders in so-called "right-to-be-forgotten" cases.
By Alaina Lancaster | September 11, 2019
San Francisco's Andrus Anderson represents a class action of phone owners who say they would not have purchased or paid top dollar for their cells if they had known about the risks of contact with radiofrequency radiation.
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