
Off Schedule, By Design
Time to dive deeper into what is going on with design patent assertions aiming to police online sales activity.
Time to dive deeper into what is going on with design patent assertions aiming to police online sales activity.
Because design patent cases often involve competitors, there is perhaps an enhanced chance, absent settlement, for design patent disputes to get all the way up to the Federal Circuit for review.
Litera CEO Avaneesh Marwaha weighs in on the company’s new solutions and how they’re changing the Biglaw workflow at Legalweek.
It is interesting how these two different yet complimentary types of intellectual property can add value to an intellectual property portfolio.
It is more important than ever for IP lawyers to keep up with changes in the law around the increasingly valuable assets that are design patents.
The Proving IP conference, hosted by NYU Law, reached the loftiest of academic heights.
She may be the only person with an art degree who academically writes in this area of the law.
Corporate investment and usage in generative AI technologies continues to accelerate. This article offers eight specific tips to consider when creating an AI usage policy.
Your favorite basic boots aren't basic when it comes to design patent law.
A chat about shoes, phones, and law.
Boutique firm columnist Gaston Kroub dissects the recent SCOTUS ruling in this landmark litigation.
Justice Sonia Sotomayor said that this is a clear case. She literally pulled out the dictionary.
In-house lawyers have yet to find their ideal workday, but your team can do better, according to this new survey report.
* From a SCOTUS mention to what seems like a final exam hypo: Kim Kardashian filed a defamation suit against celeb gossip site Media Takeout for reporting she'd faked her robbery and filed a fraudulent insurance claim. In her complaint, she alleges that the site victimized her again by "referring to her as a liar and thief." [Reuters] * A legal recruiter claims that she received a series of death threats after she made political donations to Hillary Clinton's campaign for president. Because she "fear[ed] for her life and safety," the disturbing calls were reported to the police, and the matter is still under investigation. We may have more on this later. [Big Law Business] * "It seems to me that the design is applied to the exterior case of the phone. [T]here shouldn’t be profits awarded based on the entire price of the phone." Thanks to SCOTUS, will Samsung get another bite at the apple when it comes to not giving up all of its profits as damages in its design patent dispute with Apple? [DealBook / New York Times] * The results of the July 2016 administration of the bar exam are out, and with a 91.96 percent pass rate for first-time takers, Duquesne Law boasted the second-best passage rate for first-timers out of all 10 Pennsylvania-area law schools, with only Penn Law coming out ahead. But which school did the worst? [Pittsburgh Tribune-Review] * "Katie is the woman in the middle doing everything. It's all because of Katie, man." Katherine Magbanua, the woman who is alleged to have facilitated the successful murder-for-hire plot against Florida State law professor Dan Markel, has been denied bond. She will remain in prison behind bars until her trial. [Tallahassee Democrat]
* As we previously mentioned, London-based firms CMS and Olswang and international firm Nabarro were considering entering into a merger. Partners at all three firms have officially voted in favor of the merger, which will close in May 2017. The new firm will operate under the CMS name. We'll have more on this later. [Legal Week] * "The infringement has been affirmed, now it's whether this huge judgment should be affirmed." In the Supreme Court's first design patent case in more than 120 years, Samsung will face off against Apple today, where the smartphone companies will duke it out over how much Samsung should have had to pay for copying the iPhone. [Reuters] * "Justice [Ruth Bader] Ginsburg no longer needs to worry about whether she seems threatening to the Court. She is the Court." A new linguistics research study tells us what we can learn from Justice Ginsburg's accent as a lawyer versus her accent as a Supreme Court justice, and how all lawyers make accommodations in their speech. [TIME] * By edict of a federal court -- and over Governor Rick Scott's objections -- Florida's voter registration deadline has been extended to 5 p.m. Wednesday thanks to Hurricane Matthew's interference with last-minute sign-ups. Florida's Democratic Party alleged many voters would be "severely burdened" by the hurricane's effects. [CNN] * Sorry, social justice warriors: Harvard Law 1Ls wanted to feed the university's striking dining services workers at their sections' social committee events, but Dean Marcia Sells shut down their plans, saying it "does not seem to make sense for us to encourage ... students to bring in food to feed workers who are on strike." [The Concourse / Deadspin]
We may need some intellectual property reform...