Technology

  • March 20, 2026

    Jury Finds Tech Co. Data Analyst Guilty Of Extortion Scheme

    A data analyst contracted to work for a Washington, D.C.-based technology company was hit with a federal jury verdict finding him guilty of conducting a cyber extortion scheme that threatened to disclose employees and executives' personal information if they didn't pay him $2.5 million.

  • March 20, 2026

    Social Media Jury Signals Potential Trouble For Meta, Google

    After six full days deliberating in a California bellwether trial over allegations that Meta Platforms Inc. and Google LLC harm children's mental health through their social media platforms, the jury submitted a question to the judge potentially indicating it may be leaning in favor of finding one or both defendants liable.

  • March 20, 2026

    Nexstar Won Over DC, But Faces Big Task In Local TV Markets

    Broadcast behemoth Nexstar had plenty to celebrate in Washington, D.C., on Thursday with twin regulatory approvals pivotal to its plan to take over rival Tegna, but even if the deal survives legal challenges, it will face scrutiny in local TV markets.

  • March 20, 2026

    Union Fund Gets Early Win In ERISA Audit Fight

    A hydro-excavation company must submit to an audit by a union pension fund, an Indiana federal judge ruled Friday, agreeing with the fund that the company is contractually obligated to do so.

  • March 20, 2026

    Authors' Attys Cut Fee Bid To $187M In $1.5B Anthropic IP Deal

    Authors who allege Anthropic pirated their work to train its Claude chatbot urged a California federal judge to grant final approval to Anthropic's $1.5 billion settlement, along with an attorney fee request revised down from $300 million to $187.5 million, arguing the deal is fair despite multiple objections.

  • March 20, 2026

    Ad Tech Class Can't Make Outside Plaintiffs Set Aside Funds

    Individual website publishers suing Google won't have to set aside 10% of any winnings in the sprawling advertising placement technology antitrust multidistrict litigation after a New York federal judge said that the certified class of publishers was embellishing its contributions in seeking the set-aside.

  • March 20, 2026

    TCL Unit Fires Back At Samsung With Its Own OLED Patent Suit

    A unit of Chinese smartphone maker TCL on Thursday accused Samsung, Walmart and Best Buy in an Eastern District of Texas lawsuit of infringing three of its patents for OLED display technology, the latest salvo in an intellectual property row between the sides after Samsung lodged its own OLED patent claims against TCL in June.

  • March 20, 2026

    DOD Calls Anthropic's Supply Chain Risk Case Premature

    The Pentagon urged the D.C. Circuit to reject Anthropic's attempt to halt the agency's designation of the artificial intelligence company as a supply chain risk to national security, arguing the designation is limited in scope, and that Anthropic's motion is premature. 

  • March 20, 2026

    Publishers Can't Get Performance Docs From Perplexity

    A Manhattan federal judge on Friday denied a request from the publishers of The Wall Street Journal and New York Post to obtain documents from Perplexity AI on how the company measures its product's performance and optimizes it, saying letting the parties continue to confer on search terms was unlikely to produce results.

  • March 20, 2026

    X Wants Fed. Circ. To Override $175M Loss Over 'Worthless' IP

    Elon Musk's X Corp. is asking the Federal Circuit to free it from a $105 million infringement verdict out of Texas and more than $70 million in interest, saying the patents are "worthless" and the claim it was found to infringe is invalid.

  • March 20, 2026

    Jury Says Musk Defrauded Twitter Investors In $44B Buyout

    A California federal jury found on Friday that Elon Musk committed securities fraud in a civil trial over claims the tech billionaire made false or misleading statements about Twitter's fake "bot" accounts problem in a bid to ditch or renegotiate his $44 billion deal to acquire the social media platform.

  • March 20, 2026

    Fed. Circ. Backs Military In Veterinary Software Dispute

    The Federal Circuit on Friday ruled in favor of the government in a dispute with a subcontractor over rights to healthcare software for a U.S. Army veterinary records system, affirming a lower court finding that the contractor failed to present a valid contract claim and could not pursue a copyright infringement claim based on defective registrations.

  • March 20, 2026

    Where Calif. State Courts Landed On Generative AI Use Rules

    The majority of California's 58 superior courts — together making up the country's largest trial court system — have decided to greenlight the use of generative artificial intelligence in their work this year, a Law360 investigation found.

  • March 20, 2026

    WTO Projects Slowed 2026 Trade Growth Due To Iran War

    After a better-than-expected increase in global trade in 2025 due in part to the frontloading of imports and artificial intelligence spending, the World Trade Organization is projecting a nosedive in 2026 trade growth because of energy price shocks driven by the Middle East conflict.

  • March 20, 2026

    4th Circ. Dubious Of Undoing Execs' Payroll Tax Convictions

    Two former software executives in North Carolina challenging their conviction for failing to pay employment taxes seemed unlikely to get a reversal in the Fourth Circuit on Friday, with at least one judge hearkening back to his days as a prosecutor as he opined that the pair had essentially been "stealing."

  • March 20, 2026

    White House Pushes Congress To Override State AI Laws

    The White House directed Congress to preempt "burdensome" state laws on artificial intelligence in a legislative framework released Friday.

  • March 20, 2026

    Taxation With Representation: Clifford Chance, Davis Polk

    In this Week's Taxation With Representation, Public Storage acquires National Storage Affiliates Trust, 3M teams up with Bain Capital to buy Madison Fire & Rescue, and Mastercard acquires stablecoin infrastructure firm BVNK.

  • March 20, 2026

    UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London

    The past week in London has seen an ex-professional footballer revive a dispute with Charles Russell Speechlys, Virgin Media face a group data protection claim after hundreds of thousands of customers' personal details were exposed online for months, and Mishcon de Reya sued by a real estate private equity firm founded by a former Morgan Stanley executive.

  • March 20, 2026

    US, Japan Agree To Develop Critical Mineral Trade Plan

    The U.S. and Japan have committed to working together to develop trade policies related to protecting supply chains of critical minerals and their downstream industries, U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer announced.

  • March 20, 2026

    Covington Steers Ecolab On $4.75B Data Center Cooling Deal

    Ecolab said Friday it has agreed to acquire CoolIT Systems, a company focused on liquid cooling technology for artificial intelligence data centers, from private equity firm KKR for approximately $4.75 billion, with Covington & Burling LLP advising Ecolab on the deal. 

  • March 20, 2026

    AI Is Key To M&A, Retaining Clients, Tulane Speakers Say

    Artificial intelligence has rapidly become central to dealmaking, with company leadership and their lawyers facing growing pressure to understand the technology or risk losing deals and clients, attendees heard at the annual Tulane Corporate Law Institute.

  • March 19, 2026

    4th Circ. Backs T-Mobile In Signal Interference Suit

    The Federal Communications Act dooms every bit of an internet and phone service provider's suit accusing T-Mobile of interfering with and slowing down its signals, the Fourth Circuit said Thursday, declining to revive the litigation.

  • March 19, 2026

    Chan Zuckerberg Initiative Hit With Gender Bias Action

    The Chan Zuckerberg Initiative LLC run by Meta Platforms Inc. CEO Mark Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan discriminated against women by routinely paying them less than men and promoting them with less frequency, according to a proposed class and collective action removed Wednesday to California federal court.

  • March 19, 2026

    Meta Offers Special Portal For Crime Investigators, Jury Told

    Meta's head of child safety policy told a New Mexico jury Thursday about the dedicated website the company maintains for law enforcement to request records, which, if marked as emergency requests, can get a response from the company in an average of 67 minutes.

  • March 19, 2026

    5th Circ. Weighs Release Of Apple IP Agreements To Xiaomi

    A Fifth Circuit panel on Thursday asked why patent licensing agreements between Apple Inc. and Blackberry Corp. should be circulated beyond outside counsel of a Chinese rival to Apple involved in overseas litigation, questioning the parties on why they "can't live" with an exclusion preventing in-house counsel from seeing the records.

Expert Analysis

  • 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.

  • 2026 State AI Bills That Could Expand Liability, Insurance Risk

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    State bills legislating artificial intelligence that are expected to pass in 2026 will reshape the liability landscape for all companies incorporating AI solutions into their business operations, as any novel private rights of action authorized under AI-related statutes signal expanding exposures, say attorneys at Wiley.

  • Reviewing Historical And Recent NYDFS Blockchain Guidance

    Excerpt from Practical Guidance
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    An industry letter released in the fall by the New York State Department of Financial Services, together with guidance issued over the past decade, signals a heightened regulatory expectation for covered institutions regarding the use of blockchain analytics and requires review, says Nicole De Santis at Nomadis Consulting.

  • SEC Virtu Deal Previews Risks Of Nonpublic Info In AI Models

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    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s recent settlement with Virtu Financial Inc. over alleged failures to safeguard customer data raises broader questions about how traditional enforcement frameworks may apply when material nonpublic information is embedded into artificial intelligence trading systems, says Braeden Anderson at Gesmer Updegrove.

  • 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.

  • Shopify Suit Is An Early Antitrust Test Of 'Buy Now, Pay Later'

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    An ongoing antitrust suit in Minnesota federal court filed by Sezzle against Shopify — one of the earliest such lawsuits focused on buy now, pay later services — could play a particularly informative role in how short-term credit offerings and the broader market develop, say attorneys at Alston & Bird.

  • 2025's Most Notable State AG Activity By The Numbers

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    State attorneys general were active in 2025, working across party lines to address federal regulatory gaps in artificial intelligence, take action on consumer protection issues, continue antitrust enforcement and announce large settlements on behalf of their citizens, say attorneys at Jenner & Block.

  • 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.

  • Autonomous AI Attacks Demarcate Shift In Risk Landscape

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    Anthropic and OpenAI recently disclosed cyberattacks where an artificial intelligence agent was the primary attacker, illustrating immediate implications for corporate governance, contracting and security programs as companies integrate AI with their business systems, say Rahul Mukhi and Melissa Faragasso at Cleary and Brian Lichter at Stroz Friedberg.

  • 2025's Defining AI Securities Litigation

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    Three securities litigation decisions from 2025 — involving General Motors, GitLab and Tesla — offer a preview of how courts will assess artificial intelligence-related disclosures, as themes such as heightened regulatory scrutiny and risk surrounding technical claims are already taking shape for the coming year, say attorneys at Cooley.

  • 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.

  • How 11th Circ.'s Zafirov Decision Could Upend Qui Tam Cases

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    Oral argument before the Eleventh Circuit last month in U.S. ex rel. Zafirov v. Florida Medical Associates suggests that the court may affirm a lower court's opinion that the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act are unconstitutional — which could wreak havoc on pending and future qui tam cases, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.

  • Series

    Mass. Banking Brief: All The Notable Legal Updates In Q4

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    Among the most significant developments on the banking regulation front in Massachusetts last quarter, Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell announced her bid for reelection, and the state Division of Banks continued its fintech focus by finalizing rules implementing a new money transmitter law, say attorneys at Nutter.

  • 3 DC Circ. Rulings Signal Shift In Search And Seizure Doctrine

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    A trio of decisions from courts in the District of Columbia Circuit, including a recent order compelling prosecutors to return materials seized from James Comey’s former attorney, makes clear that continued government possession of digital evidence may implicate the Fourth Amendment, says Gregory Rosen at RJO.

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