Technology

  • February 11, 2026

    Pornhub Parent Escapes User Tracking Suit, For Now

    A California federal judge tossed for lack of jurisdiction a lawsuit accusing an adult entertainment company of tracking Pornhub users' data and sharing it with advertisers, finding that the company is incorporated in Delaware, headquartered in Texas, and the plaintiffs haven't tied their claims to company activity in California.

  • February 11, 2026

    Estee Lauder Hits Walmart With TM Suit Alleging Copycats

    Estee Lauder hit Walmart with a trademark infringement suit in California federal court Monday, accusing it of hawking copycat versions of its luxury personal care products, cosmetics and fragrance collections sold under popular brands including Clinique, La Mer and Tom Ford. 

  • February 11, 2026

    Squires Spurns 16 Petitions, Grants 6 In Latest Bulk Order

    U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Director John Squires' latest summary decision instituted six petitions for America Invents Act patent challenges and denied 16 others, bringing his total of rejected petitions to 266.

  • February 11, 2026

    Gogo Renews Concerns With FCC's 900 MHz Rework

    In-flight communications provider Gogo is asking the Federal Communications Commission to consider stronger guardrails to protect incumbents like itself as it prepares to pass a rule reworking two bands of 900 megahertz spectrum to make room for more high-speed internet.

  • February 11, 2026

    MrBeast, Ex-IT Worker Near Deal In Trade Secret Theft Dispute

    YouTube star MrBeast's media company has told a North Carolina federal judge it has reached a settlement in principle to resolve its lawsuit accusing a former IT contractor of downloading thousands of confidential company documents ahead of his firing and leaving behind hidden cameras throughout the company's offices.

  • February 11, 2026

    AI Cos. Would Have To Disclose Training Under Bipartisan Bill

    A bipartisan bill introduced in the U.S. Senate would require technology companies to disclose copyrighted works that they use to train generative artificial intelligence models with the U.S. Copyright Office.

  • February 11, 2026

    Apple Keeps PTAB Win Over Fintiv Patent Claims At Fed. Circ.

    The Federal Circuit on Wednesday upheld Apple's Patent Trial and Appeal Board win in its challenge to claims in a patent issued to the defunct Austin, Texas-based mobile payment startup that would become Fintiv.

  • February 11, 2026

    CoreWeave Hit With 2 More Suits Over Data Center Delays

    CoreWeave Inc. was hit Tuesday with two more proposed shareholder class actions over alleged misleading statements on its capacity to handle consumer demand and data center construction delays.

  • February 11, 2026

    Pegasystems Settles Mass. Shareholder Actions For $7M

    Pegasystems has agreed to pay $7 million to settle three shareholder derivative suits in Massachusetts state and federal courts alleging the software company's top officials sat on details of a 2020 trade secrets suit that led to a now-overturned $2 billion verdict.

  • February 11, 2026

    Stockholder Sues AI Firm Airship In Del. For Books, Records

    A California stockholder of a California-based artificial intelligence communication company has filed suit in the Delaware Chancery Court seeking to force the agency to turn over financial and board records, alleging that it has improperly limited his access to information needed to value his shares.

  • February 11, 2026

    Judge Tosses Patent Suit Over Decentralized Exchange Tech

    A New York federal judge has thrown out a lawsuit accusing the companies behind Uniswap of infringing patents for smart contract technology used in decentralized exchanges, finding the patent claims didn't pass the U.S. Supreme Court's Alice test.

  • February 11, 2026

    Technology Group Of The Year: Sullivan & Cromwell

    Sullivan & Cromwell LLP served as the lead adviser to Elon Musk, xAI and X during the merger of the artificial intelligence company with the social media company in a $113 billion transaction this past year, earning the firm a spot among the 2025 Law360 Technology Groups of the Year.

  • February 11, 2026

    ZTE Escapes Samsung's Patent Licensing Case For Now

    A California federal court has found that ZTE lacks sufficient connections to the U.S. for the court to have jurisdiction over claims from Samsung that the China-based technology company refuses to license its standard essential patents on fair terms.

  • February 11, 2026

    Intel 401(k) Suit Arguments Pushed To Next High Court Term

    The U.S. Supreme Court will wait until next term to hear arguments in an appeal from Intel ex-workers seeking to revive proposed class allegations that their 401(k) retirement savings were dragged down by underperforming target-date funds, a delay confirmed by justices' April calendar posted on Wednesday.

  • February 11, 2026

    Weil, Latham Lead Solar Project Builder's $513M IPO

    Power infrastructure provider Solv Energy Inc. hit the public markets Wednesday after raising nearly $513 million in its initial public offering.

  • February 10, 2026

    Ziff Davis Sues Google Amid Mounting Ad Tech Antitrust Suits

    Digital media publisher Ziff Davis Inc. has filed the latest antitrust lawsuit against Google over its advertising technology, alleging in its New York federal complaint that the Silicon Valley giant unlawfully monopolizes the publisher ad server and ad exchange markets.

  • February 10, 2026

    7th Circ. Mulls Outcome Health Execs' $1B Fraud Convictions

    Seventh Circuit judges hearing former Outcome Health executives' challenge to a $1 billion fraud conviction seemed critical of the U.S. government's handling of the case on Tuesday as they questioned why its admitted asset over-restraint and introduction of certain grand jury statements should not require reversal.

  • February 10, 2026

    Social Media App Plaintiff 'Not Addicted To YouTube,' Jury Told

    An attorney for Google told a California state jury Tuesday during his opening remarks in the first bellwether trial over social media companies allegedly harming young people's mental health that the plaintiff's extensive medical records, own words and user history show she is not addicted to YouTube.

  • February 10, 2026

    Meta Gave Short Shrift To Safety Efforts, Ex-Exec Testifies

    A former Facebook safety executive testified Tuesday in the New Mexico attorney general's trial against Meta that over his time there, proposals for safety improvements faced increasing resistance and onerous approvals in which non-safety colleagues "whittled down" their effectiveness.

  • February 10, 2026

    Adobe Faces Another Suit Over Alleged AI Training Piracy

    Adobe Inc. was hit with another proposed class action in California federal court, accusing the software giant of surreptitiously using hundreds of thousands of copyrighted books in the "notorious" RedPajama and Common Crawl datasets to train its SlimLM artificial intelligence models without authors' consent.

  • February 10, 2026

    Valve's Trial Against Accused Patent Troll Begins In Seattle

    Valve Corp. told a Seattle federal jury Tuesday that inventor Leigh Rothschild and his intellectual property firms spent years "harassing" the video game company over patents it was already licensed to use in pursuit of a bigger payout, pressing play on a trial that will test Washington's Patent Troll Prevention Act.

  • February 10, 2026

    FirstNet Reauthorization Bill Advances To Full Committee

    A bill that would renew the First Responder Network Authority for just over a decade sailed through a House subcommittee hearing Tuesday afternoon and is now headed to the full committee for a vote.

  • February 10, 2026

    Amazon Calls FTC Allegations Of Hidden Documents 'Reckless'

    Amazon.com assailed the Federal Trade Commission for accusing it of using auto-deleting Signal chats and improper privilege claims to hide evidence of rules that created an artificial pricing floor across online retail stores, asking a Washington federal judge to appoint a special master to handle the "inflammatory, close-of-discovery filings."

  • February 10, 2026

    AI Platform Duo Accused Of Crypto Rug Pull, Faked Suicide

    A pair of cryptocurrency developers face a suit accusing them of extracting about $50 million from a rug-pull scheme on investors in their purported artificial intelligence venture, which ended with the scheme's collapse and one of the developers faking his own death.

  • February 10, 2026

    Fla. Social Media Ban Violates Teens' Rights, 11th Circ. Told

    Snap Inc. is fighting Florida's attempt to keep a state law restricting teenagers' social media use, telling the Eleventh Circuit that children also have a First Amendment right to speech on the internet regarding matters of public importance. 

Expert Analysis

  • Opinion

    Supreme Court Term Limits Would Carry Hidden Risk

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    While proposals for limiting the terms of U.S. Supreme Court justices are popular, a steady stream of relatively young, highly marketable ex-justices with unique knowledge and influence entering the marketplace of law and politics could create new problems, say Michael Broyde at Emory University and Hayden Hall at the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware.

  • Navigating A Sea Change In Rent Algorithm Regulation

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    The U.S. Department of Justice's proposed settlement of the RealPage lawsuit represents a pivotal moment in the regulation of algorithmic rent-setting, restraining use of these tools amid a growing trend of regulatory limits on use of algorithmic data and methodologies in establishing housing rental prices. say attorneys at Wilson Elser.

  • Next Steps For Orgs. Amid Updated OpenAI Usage Policies

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    OpenAI's updates to its usage policies, clarifying that its tools are not substitutes for professional medical, legal or other regulated advice, sends a clear signal that organizations should mirror this clarity in their governance policies to mitigate compliance and liability exposure, say attorneys at Baker Donelson.

  • Autonomous Vehicle Liability Trends To Watch In 2026

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    With autonomous vehicles increasingly making their own decisions, the liability landscape for AVs has changed over the past year — highlighting a number of important issues that companies and practitioners should keep a close eye on in 2026, says Farid Yaghoubtil at Downtown LA Law Group.

  • Key Crypto Class Action Trends And Rulings In 2025

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    As the law continued to take shape in the growing area of crypto-assets, this year saw a jump in crypto class action litigation, including noteworthy decisions on motions to compel arbitration and class certification, according to Justin Donoho at Duane Morris.

  • Tips For Drafting, Negotiating Quantum Service Agreements

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    Due to the experimental and volatile nature of quantum computing technology — at least initially — lawyers and legal practitioners should consider a few risks when drafting or negotiating a quantum-as-a-service agreement, including if the underlying hardware design is faulty or not appropriate for maintenance, say attorneys at Covington.

  • Calling The AI Witness In 2026's Merger Reviews

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    Organizations that anticipate facing a second request or merger clearance review in 2026 should collect artificial intelligence artifacts as part of discovery, and distinguish between human-generated and machine-generated materials, says Sean McDermott at FTI Consulting.

  • Tracking The Evolution Of AI Insurance Regulation In 2025

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    As artificial intelligence continues to transform the insurance industry, including underwriting, pricing, claims processing and customer engagement, state regulators, led by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, are increasing oversight to ensure that innovation does not outpace consumer protections, say attorneys at Fenwick.

  • Series

    Knitting Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Stretching my skills as a knitter makes me a better antitrust attorney by challenging me to recalibrate after wrong turns, not rush outcomes, and trust that I can teach myself the skills to tackle new and difficult projects — even when I don’t have a pattern to work from, says Kara Kuritz at V&E.

  • How 11th Circ.'s Qui Tam Review Could Affect FCA Litigation

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    On Dec. 12, the Eleventh Circuit will hear arguments in U.S. ex rel. Zafirov v. Florida Medical Associates, setting the stage for a decision that could drastically reduce enforcement under the False Claims Act, and presenting an opportunity to seek U.S. Supreme Court review of the act's whistleblower provisions, say attorneys at Epstein Becker.

  • The Hidden Pitfalls Of Letters Of Credit In Lease Negotiations

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    Amid a surge in commercial office leasing driven by artificial intelligence firms, it's crucial for landlords to be aware of the potential downside of accepting letters of credit — in particular, for amounts of security that are less than the statutory bankruptcy claim cap, say attorneys at Allen Matkins.

  • Series

    The Biz Court Digest: Welcome To Miami

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    After nearly 20 years in operation, the Miami Complex Business Litigation Division is a pioneer upon which other jurisdictions in the state have been modeled, adopting many innovations to keep its cases running more efficiently and staffing experienced judges who are accustomed to hearing business disputes, say attorneys at King & Spalding.

  • Identifying And Resolving Conflicts Among Class Members

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    As the Fifth Circuit's recent decision in Nova Scotia Health Employees' Pension Plan v. McDermott International illustrates, intraclass conflicts can determine the fate of a class action — and such conflicts can be surprisingly difficult to identify, says Andrew Faisman, a clerk at the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.

  • How AI Exec Order May Tee Up Legal Fights With States

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    The Trump administration's draft executive order would allow it to challenge and withhold federal dollars from states with artificial intelligence laws, but until Congress passes comprehensive AI legislation, states may have to defend their regulatory frameworks in extended litigation, says Charles Mills, a clerk at the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of West Virginia.

  • Adapting To A Plaintiff-Side Mindset For Patent Monetization

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    A recent decrease in risk for patent owners at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, combined with increased corporate interest in monetizing patent assets, creates an attractive case for evaluating patents from a plaintiff-side mindset, but in-house counsel transitioning from a defense-side mindset to a plaintiff-side mindset should study certain considerations, says Kate Tellez at Steptoe.

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