Intellectual Property

  • March 03, 2026

    Squires' Restrictions On Conflicts May Have Little Effect

    U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Director John Squires has barred patent examiners from evaluating ​applications for companies where they have any financial interest, rather than a former $15,000 cap, but attorneys raised concerns that the scope of his changes is small, and there are no consequences for not complying.

  • March 03, 2026

    7th Circ. Wary Of Bid For Counterfeiting Damages Explainer

    The Seventh Circuit seemed skeptical Tuesday of an online clothing retailer's challenge to its minimal damages award against an alleged counterfeiter, while suggesting the retailer also seemingly tried to "run away from" its district court judge.

  • March 03, 2026

    Caltech Says Zoom Infringes Videoconferencing Tech Patent

    The California Institute of Technology filed a lawsuit against Zoom Communications in Delaware federal court Monday alleging that its videoconferencing platform, marketed under Zoom Meetings, Zoom Workplace and Zoom Webinars, unlawfully infringes the university's patent that was developed years ago to support multinational, high-energy physics research collaborations involving thousands of users.

  • March 03, 2026

    XAI Presses Judge To Block California's AI Disclosure Law

    XAI has told a California federal judge that the state had fallen short of its obligations to inform the court and the company if it planned to institute any enforcement actions when responding to a court order, with xAI reiterating its request for the court to block a law that would require data used to train artificial intelligence be disclosed.

  • March 03, 2026

    Payroll Co.'s Poaching Suit Can Proceed, Ga. Judge Says

    Enterprise software firm invenioLSI must face a suit from a rival company alleging it conspired to engineer a "mass defection" of workers in 2024, after a Georgia federal judge ruled that it "did not have a legal right" to aid in a plan that led to several high-level managers' defections.

  • March 03, 2026

    USTR Warns Of Rampant Sports Broadcast Piracy

    The Office of the U.S. Trade Representative on Tuesday issued its latest list of overseas "notorious markets" selling illicit and counterfeit goods, focusing on the proliferation of pirated sports broadcasts ahead of this year's FIFA World Cup.

  • March 03, 2026

    Fed. Circ. Revives Challenge To Augmented Reality Surgical IP

    The Federal Circuit on Tuesday partly revived a patent challenge brought by a medical technology company, overruling the Patent Trial and Appeal Board in saying that there was no motivation for one to combine the teachings of a prior patent and an informational document.

  • March 03, 2026

    Squires And Stewart's Trademark Office, By The Numbers

    Since new leadership has taken charge at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, the agency has made progress on a number of key metrics for trademark prosecution, although attorneys say the data gets more mixed the deeper you dive into the numbers.

  • March 03, 2026

    Another YouTuber Sues Runway AI Over Alleged Scraping

    A YouTuber is suing artificial intelligence video generator Runway AI, alleging that it bypassed YouTube's technological measures to download video files in order to train its systems.

  • March 03, 2026

    Copyright Licensing Org. Unveils AI-Use Options For Colleges

    The Copyright Clearance Center on Tuesday unveiled a new content licensing option for artificial intelligence systems used by colleges and universities.

  • March 03, 2026

    King & Spalding Adds 3 More Attys From Winston & Strawn

    King & Spalding LLP announced Tuesday that it is continuing to expand in Dallas by adding three more attorneys from Winston & Strawn LLP.

  • March 03, 2026

    Skadden Hit With Sanctions Over 'Vexatious' Gaming Suit

    A Manhattan federal judge has sanctioned Papaya Gaming and its attorneys from Skadden for what the court said was a "blatant" attempt to relitigate claims in Virginia that had already been dismissed in a false advertising dispute in New York with Skillz Platform, one of its competitors.

  • March 03, 2026

    Genentech Says Biocon Importing Infringing Cancer Drugs

    Biotechnology company Genentech Inc. claimed Indian firm Biocon Ltd. is importing drugs into the U.S. that infringe four Genentech patents related to a breast cancer treatment, asking the U.S. International Trade Commission to investigate and ultimately bar the imports.

  • March 02, 2026

    Macy's, Petco, Starbucks Close To Dodging Payment IP Suits

    A Texas federal judge is encouraging the court to free Macy's, Petco and Starbucks from litigation accusing them of infringing payment processing patents, saying they're covered under a license with the processors.

  • March 02, 2026

    Chanel, Nordstrom Among 12 Cos. Sued Over Store Finder IP

    The owner of interactive mapping technology patents has sued a dozen top retailers in the Eastern District of Texas, with targets ranging from a luxury fashion house to a discount book seller.

  • March 02, 2026

    Perplexity Says It Didn't Knowingly Infringe Papers' Content

    Artificial intelligence startup Perplexity AI Inc. is asking a New York federal court to dismiss parts of a pair of lawsuits brought by The New York Times and Chicago Tribune claiming its search engine spits out verbatim portions of their writing, arguing the suits contain no allegations that Perplexity was acting with volition.

  • March 02, 2026

    Tech Co. Tells 3rd Circ. Plenty Alleged To Revive IP Suit

    A New Jersey software company urged the Third Circuit on Monday to revive its suit against a traffic technology company over the alleged unlicensed use of one of its products, arguing that there were enough facts in its complaint to survive a motion to dismiss.

  • March 02, 2026

    Cable Industry Group Sues US Copyright Office Over Fees

    The cable industry's main trade group is suing the U.S. Copyright Office, challenging an agency rule it says inflates the royalties cable providers must pay for carrying broadcast television by requiring them to report revenue they never actually receive.

  • March 02, 2026

    Post Univ. Can't Justify 'Absurd' $7.4B IP Demand, Jury Told

    The proposed range of damages that Post University is seeking from the academic file sharing website Course Hero is "absurd" and shows that "something must be broken," the defense told a Hartford federal jury Monday before deliberations began in a lawsuit that could fetch more than $7.4 billion under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.

  • March 02, 2026

    Overlap Job Duties Off Limits To Ex-Joe Gibbs Racing Director

    Joe Gibbs Racing LLC's former competition director can keep his job at rival NASCAR team Spire Motorsports but can't do any work that overlaps with his old duties, a North Carolina federal judge ruled Monday in partially granting the super team's bid for a temporary restraining order.

  • March 02, 2026

    ITC To Review Memory Imports Over Chip Patent Claims

    The U.S. International Trade Commission is launching an investigation into whether an Arizona-based semiconductor maker's imports are infringing patents held by a California rival.

  • March 02, 2026

    Drugmakers Warn Justices Oregon Pricing Law Risks Secrets

    Pharmaceutical manufacturers have asked the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn Oregon's drug‑pricing transparency law, arguing it forces companies to publicly justify their pricing decisions and give up valuable trade secrets in violation of the First Amendment and the Constitution's takings clause.

  • March 02, 2026

    Justices Reject Appeal Over Copyright For AI-Created Art

    The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined an appeal from a computer scientist who was denied a copyright for artwork created by an artificial intelligence system, leaving in place a D.C. Circuit ruling that sided with the U.S. Copyright Office's position that only human-created works can be registered.

  • March 02, 2026

    Justices Decline To Hear Challenge To NJ Royalty Tax System

    The U.S. Supreme Court declined on Monday to hear a tobacco company's claims that New Jersey's method of taxing royalty income discriminates against interstate commerce by basing a deduction on the amount of business activity a royalty recipient conducts inside the state.

  • February 27, 2026

    Review Denials Put Claim Construction Under A Microscope

    Several decisions denying or ending America Invents Act reviews because patent challengers were found to have taken inconsistent claim construction positions in the review and in litigation have made the way patent terms are interpreted into a key battleground in many disputes.

Expert Analysis

  • Series

    The Law Firm Merger Diaries: Forming Measurable Ties

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    Relationship-building should begin as early as possible in a law firm merger, as intentional pathways to bringing people together drive collaboration, positive client response, engagements and growth, says Amie Colby at Troutman.

  • 5 E-Discovery Predictions For 2026 And Beyond

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    2026 will likely be shaped by issues ranging from artificial intelligence regulatory turbulence to potential evidence rule changes, and e-discovery professionals will need to understand how to effectively guide the responsible and defensible adoption of emerging tools, while also ensuring effective safeguards, say attorneys at Littler.

  • Athlete's Countersuit Highlights Broader NIL Coverage Issues

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    Former University of Georgia football player Damon Wilson's countersuit against the university's athletic association over a name, image and likeness contract offers an early view into how NIL disputes — and the attendant coverage implications — may metastasize once institutions step fully into the role of contracting and enforcement parties, says Sarah Abrams at Baleen Specialty.

  • Business Considerations Amid Hemp Product Policy Change

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    With the passage of a bill fundamentally narrowing the federal definition of "hemp," there are practical and business considerations that brands, manufacturers and other parties should heed over the next year, including operational strategies, evaluating contract and counterparty risk, and tax implications, say attorneys at Foley Hoag.

  • Disney's OpenAI Deal Could Be Turning Point In IP Licensing

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    The Disney-OpenAI agreement last month is less an anomaly than an early attempt to define what licensed generative use of entertainment intellectual property looks like in practice, including how artificial intelligence user-generated content is permitted without eroding ownership and control, says Alex Locke at Meister Seelig.

  • Series

    Judges On AI: How Courts Can Boost Access To Justice

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    Arizona Court of Appeals Judge Samuel A. Thumma writes that generative artificial intelligence tools offer a profound opportunity to enhance access to justice and engender public confidence in courts’ use of technology, and judges can seize this opportunity in five key ways.

  • Fed. Circ. In November: Looking For Patent 'Blaze Marks'

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    The Federal Circuit's recent decision in Duke v. Sandoz serves as a warning that when patentees craft claims, they must provide adequate "blaze marks" that direct a skilled artisan to the specific claimed invention, and not just the individual claimed elements in isolation, say attorneys at Knobbe Martens.

  • Examining Privilege In Dual-Purpose Workplace Investigations

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    The Sixth Circuit's recent holding in FirstEnergy's bribery probe ruling that attorney-client privilege applied to a dual-purpose workplace investigation because its primary purpose was obtaining legal advice highlights the uncertainty companies face as federal circuit courts remain split on the appropriate test, say attorneys at Proskauer.

  • Opinion

    The Case For Emulating, Not Dividing, The Ninth Circuit

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    Champions for improved judicial administration should reject the unfounded criticisms driving recent Senate proposals to divide the Ninth Circuit and instead seek to replicate the court's unique strengths and successes, says Ninth Circuit Judge J. Clifford Wallace.

  • Why 'Baby Shark' Floundered In Foreign Service Waters

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    The Second Circuit recently ruled that the "Baby Shark" company couldn’t use email to serve alleged infringers based in China under an international agreement prohibiting such service, providing several important lessons for parties in actions involving defendants in jurisdictions unwilling or unable to effectuate efficient service, say attorneys at Greenspoon Marder.

  • How Chinese Utility Models Fit Into Global IP Strategies

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    Recent guidelines from the China National Intellectual Property Administration put the spotlight on the value of Chinese utility models — especially for device-focused innovations — and the interplay between utility models and conventional Chinese patents, say attorneys at Foley & Lardner.

  • Series

    Muay Thai Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Muay Thai kickboxing has taught me that in order to win, one must stick to one's game plan and adapt under pressure, just as when facing challenges by opposing counsel or judges, says Mark Schork at Feldman Shepherd.

  • Higher Expectations For 'Schedule A' IP Suits On The Horizon

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    Two 2025 rulings may reflect a growing judicial discomfort with the current state of Schedule A litigation — intellectual property lawsuits that typically involve brand owners suing multiple defendants doing business on e-commerce platforms — and that evidentiary submissions and temporary restraining order requests may face more rigorous review, says Dylan Scher at Quinn Emanuel.

  • Series

    Law School's Missed Lessons: Intentional Career-Building

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    A successful legal career is built through intention: understanding expectations, assessing strengths honestly and proactively seeking opportunities to grow and cultivating relationships that support your development, say Erika Drous and Hillary Mann at Morrison Foerster.

  • Trending At The PTAB: The Policies That Are Redefining IPR

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    The evolution of the Patent Trial and Appeal Board's inter partes review institution regime last year, coupled with the policy considerations behind that evolution, marks a shift toward greater gatekeeping of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's resources and patent enforcement rights, say attorneys at Finnegan.

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