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Technology
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November 06, 2025
PayPal Beats Antitrust Suit Over Merchant Rules Again
PayPal has for a second time beat a proposed class action accusing it of illegally boosting online retail prices with restrictive merchant agreements, but the consumers have one more chance to amend.
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November 06, 2025
Core Scientific Reaches $14.75M Deal With SPAC Investors
Bankrupt cryptocurrency miner Core Scientific has reached a $14.75 million agreement to settle proposed class action claims brought by an investor in the special purpose acquisition company that made a $4.3 billion deal to bring the miner public via merger.
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November 06, 2025
Squires Rebuffs Another 21 PTAB Petitions Without Comment
U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Director John Squires issued a one-page order Thursday rejecting 21 patent challenges from companies including Microsoft, Apple and Google, continuing his new practice of summarily denying such petitions with no explanation.
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November 06, 2025
Sinclair Says Disney-YouTube Blackout An Antitrust Problem
Sinclair's CEO expressed frustration about the ongoing blackout of Disney programming on YouTube TV, saying the dispute between media giants raises potential antitrust concerns because local broadcasters whose stations are affiliated with Disney's ABC broadcast network have no say over whether their content is getting distributed to viewers.
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November 06, 2025
Verizon Gets Backup In Fight Against Stewart Terminating IPR
Patent quality advocacy group Askeladden LLC has backed Verizon's appeal of former acting U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Director Coke Morgan Stewart's decision to wipe out a Patent Trial and Appeal Board decision in the telecom company's favor invalidating an Omega Patents patent.
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November 06, 2025
Education Tech Co. Inks $5.1M Data Breach Deal With 3 AGs
Technology company Illuminate Education Inc. will pay a total of $5.1 million to California, Connecticut and New York and strengthen its data security efforts after a breach in late 2021 and early 2022 exposed the information of millions of students to online hackers, the attorneys general of the three states announced Thursday.
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November 06, 2025
Meta Accused Of AI Copyright Theft By Entrepreneur Mag
The owner of Entrepreneur magazine hit Meta Platforms Inc. with the latest suit accusing an artificial intelligence developer of infringing copyrighted material, telling a California federal court Thursday Meta "seeks to build a multibillion-dollar artificial intelligence empire on a foundation of systematic and widespread copyright theft."
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November 06, 2025
Social Media Apps Must Face Jury After Section 230 Loss
A California state judge refused Wednesday to grant social media companies summary judgment on claims their platforms harm young users' mental health, again rejecting arguments that Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act shields them from liability, and sent three cases to bellwether trials, with the first to begin Jan. 27.
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November 06, 2025
Judge Mehta 'Still Digging Out' From Google, Oath Keepers
U.S. District Judge Amit P. Mehta said Thursday he is still playing catch-up from a period during which his time was spent with virtually nothing but the Google search case and the prosecution of Oath Keepers charged with sedition and other crimes from the Jan. 6 storming of the U.S. Capitol.
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November 06, 2025
AI-Powered Parking Lot Startup Metropolis Raises $1.6B
Parking payments artificial intelligence company Metropolis Technologies Inc. on Thursday revealed that it reached a $5 billion valuation after raising $1.6 billion of debt and equity fundraising.
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November 06, 2025
Apple Denies Blame For Gift Card Scammers' Actions
Apple told a California federal judge a proposed class action accusing it of selling gift cards that scammers can drain before customers get a chance to use them doesn't identify any design flaw or deceptive statement that would make the tech giant liable for criminals' conduct.
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November 06, 2025
Google-Epic Judge Raises Doubts About App Antitrust Deal
The California federal judge overseeing Epic Games' antitrust suit against Google expressed serious doubts Thursday about their recent deal to end their fight over Android app distribution, ordering an evidentiary hearing and warning he's not sure the proposed deal will correct Google's illegal conduct.
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November 06, 2025
Pfizer Matches Novo's $10B Metsera Bid, And Other Rumors
Pfizer Inc. reportedly raised its offer for Metsera Inc. to match a $10 billion bid from Novo Nordisk Inc., as a bidding war and legal squabble play out between the drugmakers. Among other deal-related rumors, Apollo Global Management Inc. reportedly dropped its bid to take private pizza chain Papa Johns International Inc., and new developments emerged as Warner Bros. Discovery Inc. weighs potential sale options.
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November 06, 2025
Health Cos. Sent Google Private Patient Data, Suit Says
A group of Georgia healthcare facilities has been hit with a proposed class action in federal court accusing the providers of disclosing patients' confidential health information to Google without consent through website tracking and data collection tools.
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November 06, 2025
EchoStar Sells Spectrum Licenses To SpaceX In $2.6B Deal
Telecommunications company EchoStar, led by White & Case LLP, announced Thursday that it agreed to sell certain licenses to Elon Musk-controlled SpaceX in a $2.6 billion stock deal that builds on a previous agreement they entered into earlier this year.
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November 06, 2025
Samourai Wallet Exec Gets 5 Years In Crypto Laundering Case
A Manhattan federal judge sentenced the CEO of crypto mixer Samourai Wallet to five years in prison Thursday after he admitted that his business facilitated big-dollar transfers derived from criminal activity including narcotics trafficking and extortion.
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November 06, 2025
Fed. Circ. Won't Overrule Stewart's Institution Practices
The Federal Circuit on Thursday rejected petitions filed by Motorola, Google, Samsung and SAP America arguing that the deputy director of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office violated their due process rights by changing institution practices at the Patent Trial and Appeal Board.
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November 05, 2025
Anthropic Deal Opt-Outs May Have Been 'Lured,' Authors Say
Authors who struck a landmark $1.5 billion settlement with Anthropic PBC to resolve their copyright infringement class action told a California federal judge Tuesday that an Arizona law firm is tricking class members into opting out of the deal through an "aggressive social media advertising campaign."
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November 05, 2025
DOJ Clears Google's $32B Deal To Buy Cybersecurity Co. Wiz
Google's plan to acquire Wiz for $32 billion and integrate the growing cloud security platform into Google Cloud has cleared the U.S. Department of Justice's antitrust review, the tech giant confirmed Wednesday.
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November 05, 2025
Crypto Thief Or 'Scapegoat'? Jury To Decide Ex-CFO's Fate
Prosecutors urged a Washington federal jury Wednesday to convict a software startup's ex-executive for pumping $35 million from company coffers into his fledgling cryptocurrency project, while defense counsel accused the government of pursuing a baseless case because the company needed someone to "scapegoat" for an investment loss.
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November 05, 2025
Helium Financial Says Fired Employees Nabbed Trade Secrets
Two former employees of Washington-based Helium Financial Group LLC stole trade secrets and used them to start their own wealth management firm after they were fired, allowing them to create "a 'clone' of Helium's business model in startup form," Helium claimed in a lawsuit filed Wednesday in Seattle federal court
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November 05, 2025
4 Firms Fueling Website Tracking Claims, Cyber Insurer Says
A quartet of California-headquartered consumer law firms were behind nearly three-quarters of the website tracking and data privacy claims that both large and small businesses have reported to cyber insurer Coalition Inc. in recent years, according to a new report released Wednesday.
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November 05, 2025
Squires' Revival Of Dormant Reexam Use Frustrates Attys
The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office director has initiated the reexamination of a Pokémon patent, a power that's only been used once in over a decade, leaving attorneys to question how this move fits into the agency's focus on settled expectations.
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November 05, 2025
1st Circ. Questions Trump Admin On NIH Indirect Cost Cuts
A First Circuit panel seemed poised on Wednesday to uphold a district court decision finding that the Trump administration lacks the authority to cap indirect costs for research grants at the National Institutes of Health.
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November 05, 2025
Masimo Tells Jury It's Owed $749M In Apple Watch IP Fight
An attorney for Masimo Corp. told a California federal jury during opening statements Wednesday that Apple Inc.'s smartwatch uses his client's groundbreaking patent in the device's feature that warns about an abnormal heart rate, and that Apple should pay up to $749 million for the infringement.
Expert Analysis
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Del. Dispatch: Conflicted Transactions And New Safe Harbors
Two recent Delaware Court of Chancery decisions involving conflicted transactions underscore that the new safe harbors established by the Delaware General Corporation Law amendments passed in March, going forward, provide a far easier route to business judgment review of conflicted transactions than were previously available, say attorneys at Fried Frank.
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FTC Focus: Surprising Ways Meador And Khan Sound Alike
Since becoming a commissioner on the Federal Trade Commission, Mark Meador's public comments, speeches and writings reveal a surprising degree of continuity with former Chair Lina Khan's approach, in an indication that differing philosophies might have comparable practical effects, say attorneys at Proskauer.
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Opinion
Privacy Bill Must Be Amended To Protect Small Businesses
While a bill recently passed by the California Senate would exempt a company's use of legally compliant website advertising and tracking technologies from the California Invasion of Privacy Act, it must be amended to adequately protect small businesses, say attorneys at Thompson Hine.
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Opinion
The Legal Education Status Quo Is No Longer Tenable
As underscored by the fallout from California’s February bar exam, legal education and licensure are tethered to outdated systems, and the industry must implement several key reforms to remain relevant and responsive to 21st century legal needs, says Matthew Nehmer at The Colleges of Law.
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Unpacking Notable Details From FTC's 'AI Washing' Cases
The Federal Trade Commission has brought many cases involving allegedly deceptive artificial intelligence claims over the past couple of years, illustrating overlooked aspects of AI washing generally and a few new types of AI marketing claims that may line up in regulatory crosshairs down the road, says Michael Atleson at DLA Piper.
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Opinion
Calif. Must Amend Trade Secret Civil Procedure
A California procedural law that effectively shields trade secret defendants from having to return company materials until the plaintiff can craft detailed requests must be amended to recognize that property recovery and trade secret analysis are distinct issues, says Matthew Miller at Hanson Bridgett.
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Previewing State Efforts To Regulate Mental Health Chatbots
New York, Nevada and Utah have all recently enacted laws regulating the use of artificial intelligence to deliver mental health services, offering early insights into how other states may regulate this area, say attorneys at Goodwin.
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What Dismissal Rulings May Mean For ERISA Forfeiture Cases
Following an influx of Employee Retirement Income Security Act class actions challenging the long-standing practice of plan sponsors using plan forfeitures to offset employer contributions, recent motion to dismiss rulings and a U.S. Department of Labor amicus brief may encourage more courts to reject plaintiffs' forfeiture theories, say attorneys at Mayer Brown.
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Justices' Age Verification Ruling May Lead To More State Laws
The U.S. Supreme Court’s recent Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton ruling, permitting a Texas law requiring certain websites to verify users’ ages, significantly expands states' ability to regulate minors’ social media access, further complicating the patchwork of internet privacy laws, say attorneys at Troutman.
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E-Discovery Quarterly: Rulings On Relevance Redactions
In recent cases addressing redactions that parties sought to apply based on the relevance of information — as opposed to considerations of privilege — courts have generally limited a party’s ability to withhold nonresponsive or irrelevant material, providing a few lessons for discovery strategy, say attorneys at Sidley.
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How DOJ's New Data Security Rules Leave HIPAA In The Dust
The U.S. Department of Justice's recently effective data security requirements carry profound implications for how healthcare providers collect, store, share and use data — and approach vendor oversight — that go far beyond the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, say attorneys at Nelson Mullins.
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Opinion
Section 1983 Has Promise After End Of Nationwide Injunctions
After the U.S. Supreme Court recently struck down the practice of nationwide injunctions in Trump v. Casa, Section 1983 civil rights suits can provide a better pathway to hold the government accountable — but this will require reforms to qualified immunity, says Marc Levin at the Council on Criminal Justice.
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Courts Redefining Software As Product Generates New Risks
A recent wave of litigation against social media platforms, chatbot developers and ride-hailing companies has some courts straying from the traditional view of software as a service to redefining software as a product, with significant implications for strict liability exposure, say attorneys at Reed Smith.
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Trump's 2nd Term Puts Merger Remedies Back On The Table
In contrast with the Biden administration, the second Trump administration has signaled a renewed willingness to resolve merger enforcement concerns through remedies from the outset, particularly when the proposed fix is structural, clearly addresses the harm and does not require burdensome oversight, say attorneys at Cooley.
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Patent Ambiguity Persists After Justices Nix Eligibility Appeal
The Supreme Court recently declined to revisit the contentious framework governing patent eligibility by denying certiorari in Audio Evolution Diagnostics v. U.S., suggesting a necessary recalibration of both patent application and litigation strategies, say attorneys at Skadden.