Tag Archives: copyright litigation
Subscribe to our Newsletter
Last month, the Federal Circuit affirmed the Delaware district court’s decision in Endo Pharms. Sols., Inc. v. Custopharm that patents for Aveed®, a testosterone replacement therapy, were not obvious and, therefore, inherent teachings
[Read More]
Back in June, when a European Parliament’s Committee on Legal Affairs passed a controversial copyright law, sending it for a full-parliament vote in July, critics were sounding the alarm that it would drive
[Read More]
A step-by-step visual guide to an important part of the legal process.
[Read More]
Spotify’s February filing to go public, which it did so on April 3, revealed some of the “weird lawsuits” it’s contending with. The Verge expertly summarized one of those cases and also deftly
[Read More]
Surely, the cat famous for her endearing scowl is smiling a little bit right meow: This week, her owner won a copyright infringement case and was awarded $710,001. Per an NPR report, the
[Read More]
One of the more popular topics we post on is patents. In 2017, we wrote about the eye-opening practice of companies warding off future challenges to their patents by shielding themselves with Native
[Read More]
With the holidays here, sweets and treats are usually on everyone’s mind. Apparently, that is no exception when it comes to the courts. As the NY Times reports, two candy makers; a British
[Read More]
If you didn’t know what “genericide” meant, most likely you’d have to google it — and therein lies the rub. The Supreme Court is considering whether “google” is now too generic a term
[Read More]
This post’s headline, “The Year of the Monkey, “monkey business,” a “macaquery” of the courts — over the last few years, the monkey selfie case has elicited countless primate puns (we went bananas!)
[Read More]
If you don’t own a T-shirt with a clever design incorporating past or present pop culture, you probably at least appreciate seeing one in passing. So, how do these popular Internet T-shirt companies
[Read More]
While the latest “Star Wars” installment continues to have a good run in the theaters, we’re in a “Star Trek” state of mind: A judge recently ruled that a fan film dispute must
[Read More]
It seems obvious that patents were intended to be public. Ostensibly, patents reward innovation by allowing for a temporary legal monopoly, and legitimate patent-holders who are using patents to produce exclusive goods would
[Read More]
Subscribe to our Newsletter
We'll keep your email safe. No spam, we promise!
LLM unifies the legal process by combining legal holds, case strategy, matter and budget management, review and analytics in a single, web-based platform. We connect legal strategy to tactics in a way no one else can, so every part of the process is actionable. Our product scales to help corporate and law firm teams gain cost-savings and eliminate inefficiencies.