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California
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March 05, 2026
Copyright Suit Over TikTok Livestream Software Trimmed
A California federal judge has dismissed some of a lawsuit alleging TikTok copied a company's livestreaming software to create a new feature on the app, trimming a breach of contract claim and a request for statutory damages.
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March 05, 2026
ERISA Recap: 6 Developments To Remember From Feb.
The Second Circuit refused to boot a former Luxottica worker's proposed class claims into solo arbitration, a Texas federal judge declined to snuff out a tobacco fee suit against 7-Eleven and a healthcare company inked a $43 million deal to wrap a case over how it handled 401(k) plan forfeitures. Here's a look back at six noteworthy moves in Employee Retirement Income Security Act cases from last month.
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March 05, 2026
Tribe Says Calif. Overreached With Safety Penalties
A California Indigenous nation is asking a federal district court to block the state's labor and safety departments from citing and enforcing civil penalties against one of its largest arms of tribal government, saying it is at risk of facing more than $200,000 in unlawful fines if the practice continues.
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March 05, 2026
Calif. Privacy Agency Dings Ford Over Opt-Out 'Friction'
Ford Motor Co. has agreed to pay a fine of just over $375,000 and provide consumers with "easy methods" to stop the sharing and sale of their personal data in order to resolve the California privacy regulator's claims that the company added "unnecessary friction" to this opt-out process, the agency said Thursday.
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March 04, 2026
Musk Tells Jury 'Biased' Judge Forced His Twitter Buy
Elon Musk testified Wednesday in a California federal trial over Twitter investors' claims that the billionaire tanked the company's stock to get a better deal and said he paid the full $44 billion offer price because the Delaware Chancery judge overseeing litigation over the sale was "extremely biased" against him.
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March 04, 2026
Zuckerberg Denies 'Addiction' In Testimony Played To NM Jury
New Mexico jurors saw videotaped testimony Wednesday from Mark Zuckerberg in the state attorney general's social media mental health trial in which the Meta CEO acknowledged that "problematic use" is a well-known problem among accountholders but rejected labels like "addiction" and "habit-forming."
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March 04, 2026
9th Circ. Spurns Uber's Bid To Halt Seattle Gig Worker Law
A divided Ninth Circuit panel on Wednesday rejected Uber and Instacart's attempt to block a Seattle law regulating deactivation of app-based worker accounts, rejecting the companies' contention that the ordinance amounts to a First Amendment violation.
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March 04, 2026
ICE Detainees Aren't Owed Bond Hearings, DOJ Tells 9th Circ.
A Justice Department attorney Wednesday urged the Ninth Circuit to reverse a district judge's ruling that a Trump administration policy denying bond hearings to detainees at an ICE facility is unlawful, arguing the detainees aren't eligible to challenge their detention because they're "seeking admission" to the country.
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March 04, 2026
Judge Eyes Fall Trial For NBA-Tied Rigged Poker Case
A Brooklyn federal judge on Wednesday told NBA stars and others accused of a scheme to use Mafia-backed, rigged poker games to cheat unsuspecting players out of millions of dollars to prepare for a November trial, while prosecutors aim to slim the case down with a raft of plea deals.
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March 04, 2026
Meta Seeks Bench Trial, Not Jury, In Mental Health MDL
Facebook and Instagram's parent company has had a change of heart when it comes to facing a jury on claims they caused underage users to become addicted to their platforms, resulting in emotional harm, telling the California federal judge overseeing the multidistrict litigation that they would now prefer a bench trial.
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March 04, 2026
Google AI Coached 'Mass Casualty' Attempt, Suicide, Suit Says
The father of a 36-year-old Florida man who recently died by suicide sued Google LLC in California federal court Wednesday, alleging Google's chatbot Gemini deluded his son into believing it was his "AI wife," convincing him to attempt a "mass casualty" attack at Miami International Airport and then coaching his suicide.
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March 04, 2026
Hayden AI Hits Co-Founder With Fraud, Trade Secret Claims
Artificial intelligence startup Hayden AI has sued one of its co-founders, alleging that after it fired him for forging board signatures and improperly charging personal expenses, he took large amounts of trade secret data to start a competing company.
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March 04, 2026
Social Media Addiction Fed Girl's Conflict With Mom, Jury Told
A UCLA psychiatrist testified Wednesday in a landmark bellwether trial over allegations that using Instagram and YouTube harm children's mental health, saying that a girl's social media addiction contributed to friction with her mother.
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March 04, 2026
Former NPR Host Says Google Trained Its AI On His Voice
Journalist David L. Greene, former longtime co-host of NPR's "Morning Edition," says Google stole his voice to train its artificial intelligence podcasting product, allowing users to mimic his cadence and personality without his consent or any kind of compensation, according to a lawsuit removed to California federal court this week.
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March 04, 2026
Care Management Co. Accused Of Swiping Software Platform
The developer of software used in the Medicare treatment arena has sued a customer care management company in Delaware Chancery Court, accusing it of wrongfully using the platform to create a competing application.
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March 04, 2026
Google Agrees To More Android Changes In Deal With Epic
Google and Epic Games offered a California federal court a new proposal Wednesday to modify an injunction issued in a monopolization case over the distribution apps on Android devices, while also reaching a broader agreement on global changes to the mobile operating system.
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March 04, 2026
ITC Probing Patent Infringement Claims Against ASUS, Others
The U.S. International Trade Commission said Wednesday it will investigate claims made by AX Wireless that laptops, routers and computer products imported into the U.S. by ASUSTeK, TP-Link Systems Inc. and other companies are infringing five patents.
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March 04, 2026
Chuckwalla Case To Stay In Michigan As Tribes Join Fight
A Michigan federal judge has decided that transferring a miner's case challenging the establishment of the Chuckwalla National Monument out of her court is "not inappropriate," while also ruling that a slew of tribal nations and environmental groups may intervene in the lawsuit.
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March 04, 2026
Construction Co. Hammers Out Deal In 401(k) Fee Suit
A construction company has agreed to settle a suit claiming it stood by while its retirement plan was overcharged in management fees, causing workers to lose out on millions of dollars in savings, according to a California federal court filing.
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March 04, 2026
Post University Wins $75M IP Verdict Against File Sharer
A Connecticut federal jury hit the parent of academic file sharing site Course Hero with a $75.3 million verdict on Wednesday, finding that it violated the Digital Millennium Copyright Act more than 3,000 times when it manipulated documents that belonged to Post University.
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March 04, 2026
Former Netflix Litigation Head Joins JAMS In Los Angeles
A former top legal executive for Netflix has joined alternative dispute resolution firm JAMS to provide mediation services at its Los Angeles center.
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March 04, 2026
Weinstein's 3rd NY Rape Trial Bumped To April
A New York state judge on Wednesday set an April 14 date for Harvey Weinstein's third rape trial after a last-minute defense attorney swap.
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March 04, 2026
BCLP Adds Capital Markets Specialist From Kirkland In LA
Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner LLP, which is also known as BCLP, is expanding its transactions team, bringing in a Kirkland & Ellis LLP capital markets expert as a partner in its Los Angeles office.
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March 03, 2026
Breyer Rips Musk Atty For 'False Impression' To Twitter Jury
U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer blasted Elon Musk's counsel Tuesday in a trial over Twitter investors' allegations that Musk intentionally tanked its stock, telling the lawyer she'd created a "false impression" with the jury by questioning an ex-Twitter attorney about her right to speak with plaintiffs' counsel while under oath.
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March 03, 2026
Ye's Ex-Worker 'Not Sure' Of Own Declaration In Wages Trial
A construction project manager suing Ye for retaliation and unpaid wages after he was fired from working at the rapper's Malibu home testified in a Los Angeles courtroom Tuesday that he's "not sure" if someone else signed a declaration filed under his name in the case.
Expert Analysis
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Opinion
AI-Assisted Arbitration Needs Safeguards To Ensure Fairness
As tribunals and arbitral institutions increasingly use artificial intelligence tools in their decision-making processes, clear disclosure standards and procedural safeguards are necessary to ensure that efficiency gains do not erode the fairness principles on which arbitration depends, says Alexander Lima at Wesco International.
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Paramount-WBD Deal Would Widen Net For Antitrust Scrutiny
The fresh likelihood of a merger between Paramount and Warner Bros. Discovery raises the prospect of added intervention from the U.S. Department of Justice due to the companies' overlaps in key markets, and may signal expanded DOJ scrutiny of potential anticompetitive effects on supply chains, says Shubha Ghosh at the Syracuse University College of Law.
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What Recent Dataset Suits Signal For AI Training Litigation
Plaintiffs are moving away from abstract debates about artificial intelligence at large and toward dataset provenance, and three filings illustrate how provenance is pled using public dataset documentation, archives and discovery‑ready allegations about copying, retention and downstream handling, says Yulia Leshchenko at Name & Fame.
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Planning For M&A Complexity After New State 'Mini-HSR' Laws
After the recent enactment of California's mini-HSR law, and with Indiana poised to pass its own, requiring the submission of Hart-Scott-Rodino premerger notifications to state attorneys general, practitioners should expand their deal planning to include state-by-state reportability as more states adopt similar mandatory merger-notification requirements, say attorneys at McDermott.
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What New Packaging Waste Laws Mean For Franchisors
With states ramping up laws establishing extended producer responsibility programs for packaging materials, paper products and single-use food service ware, restaurant and hospitality franchisors face special compliance challenges as they navigate a delicate balance between conflicting priorities, say attorneys at Baker McKenzie.
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What's Next After NLRB Dismissal Of SpaceX Suit
Though the National Labor Relations Board’s recent decision to dismiss its long-running unfair labor practice complaint against SpaceX on jurisdictional grounds temporarily resolves a circuit split over injunctions, constitutional and employee-classification questions remain, say attorneys at Proskauer.
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Series
Playing Piano Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Playing piano and practicing law share many parallels relating to managing complexity: Just as hearing an entire musical passage in my head allows me to reliably deliver the message, thinking about the audience's impression helps me create a legal narrative that keeps the reader engaged, says Michael Shepherd at Fish & Richardson.
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AI Trade Secret Conviction Highlights Espionage Risks
A California federal court's conviction last month of an ex-Google engineer who stole artificial intelligence trade secrets for the benefit of China is the latest in a series of foreign economic espionage cases and illustrates the urgent need for U.S. companies to implement robust security measures, says attorney Peter Toren.
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Rebuttal
Substantial Legal Grounds Supported HPE-Juniper Challenge
A recent Law360 guest article argued that the Hewlett Packard-Juniper Networks settlement was part of a trend of antitrust agencies reanchoring themselves in evidence by resisting ill-founded merger challenges, but the complaint against HPE-Juniper actually relied on substantial legal grounds and modern analytical frameworks, says attorney Richard Wolfram.
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NY RAISE Act Raises The Bar For Frontier AI Developers
For organizations developing or substantially modifying highly capable artificial intelligence models, the New York Responsible AI Safety and Education Act represents a meaningful escalation beyond California's S.B. 53, even though it applies to a narrower group of developers, so companies should expect additional obligations, particularly around accelerated incident reporting, say attorneys at Kilpatrick.
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Opinion
A TVPRA Safe Harbor Would Boost Antitrafficking Efforts
Adding a well-thought-out safe harbor measure to the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act, which is currently up for amendment and reauthorization, would motivate proactive cooperation from hotels and other businesses to combat sex trafficking, say attorneys at Snell & Wilmer.
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AI-Generated Doc Ruling Guides Attys On Privilege Risks
A New York federal court's ruling, in U.S. v. Heppner, that documents created by a defendant using an artificial intelligence tool were not privileged, can serve as a guide to attorneys for retaining attorney-client or work-product privilege over client documents created with AI, say attorneys at Sher Tremonte.
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The Law Firm Merger Diaries: Leadership Strategy After Day 1
For law firm leaders, ensuring a newly combined law firm lives up to its promise, both in its first days of operation and well after, includes tough decisions, clear and specific communication, and cheerleading, says Peter Michaud at Ballard Spahr.
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Monetizing EV Charging Stations For Long-Term Success
An electric vehicle charging station's longevity hinges on monetizing operations through diverse revenue streams, contractual documentation of charge point operators' and site hosts' rights and responsibilities, and ensuring reliability and security of facilities, says Levi McAllister at Morgan Lewis.
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Calif.'s Civility Push Shows Why Professionalism Is Vital
The California Bar’s campaign against discourteous behavior by attorneys, including a newly required annual civility oath, reflects a growing concern among states that professionalism in law needs shoring up — and recognizes that maintaining composure even when stressed is key to both succeeding professionally and maintaining faith in the legal system, says Lucy Wang at Hinshaw.