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									October 10, 2025
									StubHub Sued Over Failure To Refund Swift's Eras Tour ShowOnline ticket reseller StubHub regularly reneges on its "FanProtect Guarantee" to either provide comparable tickets or refund customers if the tickets they bought aren't available the day of the concert, according to a proposed class action by a woman who says she was swindled out of thousands of dollars during Taylor Swift's Eras Tour. 
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									October 10, 2025
									Experts Doubt Gold Card Will Siphon Off EB-5 InvestorsConcerns that President Donald Trump's gold card will siphon off noncitizens who would otherwise seek permanent residency through the EB-5 investor program might be overblown, with experts suggesting the program's 35-year track record and stability will continue attracting foreign investors. 
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									October 10, 2025
									SEC's Atkins Criticizes Del. As 'Uninterested' In IPO ReformU.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Paul Atkins said he is "disappointed" by recent changes to Delaware law that he believes will drive up litigation costs for public companies and make the state seem "uninterested in reform" that would encourage more companies to file initial public offerings there. 
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									October 10, 2025
									Back Where We Started: Life After FTC's Noncompete BanNow that the Federal Trade Commission has abandoned efforts for a nationwide ban on noncompete clauses, the employment provisions remain subject to a constellation of changing state laws and can sometimes still violate federal law in certain situations. 
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									October 10, 2025
									Profs Say Apple Used Copyrighted Material For AI TrainingTwo neuroscientists have sued Apple in California federal court, claiming it made use of their copyrighted materials to train its artificial intelligence model Apple Intelligence. 
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									October 10, 2025
									OpenAI's Sora Backlash Shows IP Challenges For Tech Cos.OpenAI's new version of its video-generation model Sora has highlighted the growing tension between the development of artificial intelligence technologies and intellectual property rights, with the company emphasizing an opt-in approach for copyright owners for using their works after backlash over a reported opt-out policy. 
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									October 10, 2025
									Pharma Co. Escapes Suit Over Ex-CEO's Alleged MisconductExscientia PLC on Friday won dismissal of a proposed class action related to the termination of its CEO after claims emerged that he participated in inappropriate workplace relationships, with the court finding the investors failed to show that the company's statements about its culture and governance were anything more than puffery. 
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									October 10, 2025
									GoPro Beats Infringement Claims In $174M Camera IP TrialA California federal jury cleared camera giant GoPro of accusations that some of its products infringed two video camera technology patents in a case where Contour IP Holding LLC had sought $174 million in damages. 
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									October 10, 2025
									Prosecutors, Ex-AT&T Exec To Resolve Bribery Case With DPAA former AT&T executive will not be retried on charges that he bribed ex-Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan early next year as planned, as his attorneys and prosecutors told an Illinois federal judge that they've agreed to resolve the matter with a deferred prosecution agreement. 
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									October 10, 2025
									GC Cheat Sheet: The Hottest Corporate News Of The WeekIt is of little solace to general counsel that most big law firms hiked their billing rates this year just slightly less than last year's increase. And it looks like Elon Musk is settling with the former chief legal officer and the general counsel of Twitter, along with two other executives, over their suit to obtain millions in promised severance pay. These are some of the stories in corporate legal news you may have missed in the past week. 
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									October 10, 2025
									Polsinelli Adds Higgs Fletcher Nonprofit Ace In LAPolsinelli PC continues expanding its California team, bringing in a Higgs Fletcher & Mack LLP nonprofit expert as a shareholder in its Los Angeles office. 
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									October 10, 2025
									Prospect Medical Gets OK For $45M Yale Health Deal In Ch. 11A Texas bankruptcy judge Friday approved a $45 million settlement between Yale New Haven Health Services Corp. and Prospect Medical that ends a legal battle over failed hospital sales, as Prospect works toward exiting Chapter 11. 
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									October 10, 2025
									Biz Groups, GOP Reps Ask Justices To Sink Colo. Climate SuitBusiness groups and over 100 Republican lawmakers are asking the U.S. Supreme Court to reverse a decision by Colorado's top court allowing Boulder's climate change tort against Exxon Mobil Corp. and Suncor Energy Inc. to proceed in state court. 
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									October 10, 2025
									Mass. AG Says Robinhood Suit Can't Halt Enforcement ActionMassachusetts regulators say Robinhood is trying to make an "end run" around their efforts to enforce the Bay State's sports betting laws, in a motion asking a judge to toss the financial services platform's lawsuit against the state. 
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									October 10, 2025
									SEC Guidance Aims To Ease IPO Process During ShutdownAs the federal government shutdown lingers, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has updated its guidance to advise companies on how they can still move forward with initial public offerings. 
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									October 10, 2025
									Edward Jones Fined $100K For 'Unreasonable' CommissionsEdward D. Jones & Co. LP has entered into a consent order with Connecticut's banking regulator, agreeing to pay a $100,000 fine and about $73,000 in restitution for charging "unreasonable" commissions to retail brokerage customers in the state. 
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									October 10, 2025
									Amazon Gets Massive Antitrust Class Action Trial DelayedAmazon.com Inc. has got a reprieve from facing a massive consumer antitrust class action and a California attorney general enforcement action in overlapping trials, with a Washington federal judge granting the retail giant's bid to delay the consumer case from October 2026 to June 2027. 
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									October 10, 2025
									Taxation With Representation: Sullivan, MoFo, FreshfieldsIn this week's Taxation With Representation, Fifth Third Bancorp acquires Comerica in an all-stock deal, Qualtrics buys experience analytics firm Press Ganey Forsta, and SoftBank buys ABB's robotics division. 
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									October 10, 2025
									UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In LondonThis past week in London has seen Paddington Bear's creators and Studio Canal sue the company behind Spitting Image, Blackpool Football Club's former owner Owen Oyston bring a fresh claim against the club, and Mishcon de Reya sue a Saudi investment group. 
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									October 10, 2025
									EDTX Jury Says Samsung Owes $445.5M After Patent TrialSamsung has to pay up about $445.5 million after a Texas federal jury found that the South Korean electronics giant infringed a series of patents related to wireless communication network efficiency owned by Collision Communications. 
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									October 09, 2025
									Musk's X Posts Trigger Disclosure In NYT Suit, Judge RulesThe government must produce a list of any security clearances granted to Elon Musk in response to The New York Times' Freedom of Information Act request, a Manhattan federal judge ruled, saying the billionaire waived his privacy interest by posting about his top secret clearance, drug use and foreign contacts. 
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									October 09, 2025
									Senate Crypto Bill Weakens State Fraud Protection, Experts SayState regulators and legal experts are urging leaders of the Senate Banking Committee to overhaul their draft crypto market structure legislation on the grounds that the current text would weaken state power to police fraud and protect investors in crypto markets and beyond. 
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									October 09, 2025
									9th Circ. Probes Buyers On HIV Drug Antitrust ClaimsInsurers and health plans told a Ninth Circuit panel on Thursday that a lower court was wrong to toss their claims that Gilead orchestrated a product-hop scheme for its HIV drugs ahead of trial and for not seeing a price drop as evidence of an alleged agreement with Teva to delay generics. 
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									October 09, 2025
									X, XAI Say Texas Best, Fastest Court For OpenAI-Apple SuitX Corp. and xAI urged a Texas federal judge not to transfer from the Northern District of Texas' Fort Worth Division their suit accusing Apple and OpenAI of anticompetitively edging out other artificial intelligence companies through a deal integrating ChatGPT into iPhones, stressing the speed of their chosen forum. 
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									October 09, 2025
									Feds' E-Verify System Resumes Operation During ShutdownThe federal E-Verify system for employers to check people's eligibility to work in the U.S. has resumed operation, a little over a week after it went offline with the start of the ongoing government shutdown. 
Expert Analysis
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								Now Is The Time To Prep For SEC's New Data Breach Regs  Recent remarks from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s acting director of the Division of Examinations suggest that the commission will support exams for compliance with its new data breach detection and reporting regulations, and a looming deadline means investment advisers and broker-dealers must act now to update their processes, say attorneys at McGuireWoods. 
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								Corp. Human Rights Regulatory Landscape Is Fragmented  Given the complexity of compliance with nations' overlapping human rights laws, multinational companies need to be cognizant of the evolving approaches to modern slavery transparency, and proposals that could reduce mandatory due diligence and reporting requirements, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher. 
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								Impending Quality Control Standards Pose Risks For Auditors  Public accounting firms will need to comply with new standards aimed at strengthening their quality control systems by the end of this year, a significant challenge sure to increase costs, individual liability and regulatory scrutiny, say Kelly Bossard at FTI Consulting and Mike Plotnick at King & Spalding. 
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								Opinion Premerger Settlements Don't Meet Standard For Bribery  Claims that Paramount’s decision to settle a lawsuit with President Donald Trump while it was undergoing a premerger regulatory review amounts to a quid pro quo misconstrue bribery law and ignore how modern legal departments operate, says Ediberto Román at the Florida International University College of Law. 
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								Texas Med Spas Must Prepare For 2 New State Laws  Two new laws in Texas — regulating elective intravenous therapy and reforming healthcare noncompetes — mark a pivotal shift in the regulatory framework for medical spas in the state, which must proactively adapt their operations and contractual practices, says Brad Cook at Munsch Hardt. 
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								Series Playing Soccer Makes Me A Better Lawyer  Soccer has become a key contributor to how I approach my work, and the lessons I’ve learned on the pitch about leadership, adaptability, resilience and communication make me better at what I do every day in my legal career, says Whitney O’Byrne at MoFo. 
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								Forced Labor Bans Hold Steady Amid Shifts In Global Trade  As businesses try to navigate shifting regulatory trends affecting human rights and sustainability, forced labor import bans present a zone of relative stability, notwithstanding outstanding questions about the future of enforcement, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher. 
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								Grappling With Workforce-Related Immigration Enforcement  To withstand the tightening of workforce-related immigration rules and the enforcement uptick we are seeing in the U.S. and elsewhere, companies must strike a balance between responding quickly to regulatory changes, and developing proactive strategies that minimize risk, say attorneys at Fragomen. 
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								Opinion The SEC Should Embrace Tokenized Equity, Not Strangle It  The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission should grant no-action relief to firms ready to pilot tokenized equity trading, not delay innovation by heeding protectionist industry arguments, says J.W. Verret at George Mason University. 
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								What To Do When Congress And DOJ Both Come Knocking  As recently seen in the news, clients may find themselves facing parallel U.S. Department of Justice and congressional investigations, requiring a comprehensive response that considers the different challenges posed by each, say attorneys at Friedman Kaplan. 
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								Series Law School's Missed Lessons: Learning From Failure  While law school often focuses on the importance of precision, correctness and perfection, mistakes are inevitable in real-world practice — but failure is not the opposite of progress, and real talent comes from the ability to recover, rethink and reshape, says Brooke Pauley at Tucker Ellis. 
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								23andMe Fine Signals ICO's New GDPR Enforcement Focus  Many of the cybersecurity failures identified by the Information Commissioner’s Office in its investigation of 23andMe, recently resulting in a £2.3 million fine, were basic lapses, but the ICO's focus on several new U.K. General Data Protection Regulation considerations will likely carry into the future, say lawyers at Womble Bond. 
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								Midyear Rewind: How Courts Are Reshaping VPPA Standards  The first half of 2025 saw a series of cases interpreting the Video Privacy Protection Act as applied to website tracking technologies, including three appellate rulings deepening circuit splits on what qualifies as personally identifiable information and who qualifies as a consumer under the statute, say attorneys at Perkins Coie. 
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								Lessons On Parallel Settlements From Vanguard Class Action.jpg)  A Pennsylvania federal judge’s unexpected denial of a proposed $40 million settlement of an investor class action against Vanguard highlights key factors parties should consider when settlement involves both regulators and civil plaintiffs, say attorneys at Ropes & Gray. 
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								How The Healthline Privacy Settlement Redefines Ad Tech Use  The Healthline settlement is the first time California has drawn a clear line in the sand around how website tracking must function in practice, so if your site uses tracking technologies, especially around sensitive content like health or finance, regulators are inspecting your website's back end, not just its banner, say attorneys at Baker Donelson.