Do SCOTUS Citations Come up Short?
Citation change is afoot (or a footer) within the Supreme Court. As noted by Fortune, SCOTUS’ first shortened link appeared on page 30 of a recent decision, courtesy of Justice Elena Kagan. Is
[Read More]Citation change is afoot (or a footer) within the Supreme Court. As noted by Fortune, SCOTUS’ first shortened link appeared on page 30 of a recent decision, courtesy of Justice Elena Kagan. Is
[Read More]In 2008 and 2009, Sanford “Spam King” Wallace of Las Vegas, Nev., took a gamble on a scheme: illegally access Facebook’s computer network, gain and store account information, send out millions of spam
[Read More]In order to help address the issues that arise as antitrust e-discovery crosses international borders, Ernst & Young held the webinar “Anticipating Pitfalls in Cross-Border Antitrust eDiscovery.” Topics discussed, as Inside Counsel reported,
[Read More]Earlier this week, a D.C. Circuit panel was not persuaded by the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers’ (NACDL) arguments that the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) should disclose the Federal Criminal Discovery
[Read More]Earlier this year, we blogged that patent suits were in full bloom in November 2015 in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas. The rush occurred to beat the Dec.
[Read More]A recently filed amicus brief takes the U.S. court where it hasn’t gone before: to explore the strange new world of whether a constructed spoken language — specifically, the Klingon language — is
[Read More]While New York City is known for its fast pace, uptown in the Bronx, underfunded criminal courts move through cases at a painfully slow rate. According to borough public defenders, this jeopardizes the
[Read More]Just last week we posted a blog about Apple refuting the claim that they had handed over their source code to China for business reasons while refusing to fulfill the United States’ request
[Read More]Siri, how much did Apple agree to pay Marathon Patent Group, Inc. over your voice-system technology? 24.9 million. According to documents recently filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Apple has agreed to
[Read More]In the latest chapter of the VW scandal, which we first blogged about last year, a former Volkswagen Group employee is suing the company for wrongful termination and violation of Michigan whistleblower law.
[Read More]CRISPR, an acronym for “clustered regularly-interspaced short palindromic repeats,” is at the center of a biotech intellectual-property battle whose outcome, according to The Wall Street Journal, could have a commercial value in the
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