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Technology
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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."
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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.
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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.
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February 10, 2026
Lutnick Rules Out Creating Value-Based Fees For Patents
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told a Senate panel Tuesday that the government is not planning to establish new fees for U.S. patents based on their value, saying the idea he was reportedly considering "is not going anywhere."
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February 10, 2026
RealPage Defends Case Challenging NY Rental Pricing Law
Property management software company RealPage is opposing a bid from New York state to toss a lawsuit challenging a new state law that prohibits building owners from using software to set residential rental rates, saying the statute clearly violates the First Amendment by banning advice.
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February 10, 2026
Apple Again Pushes To Escape Masimo's $634M IP Verdict
Apple is doubling down on its bid to have U.S. District Judge James V. Selna relieve it from a jury's $634 million infringement verdict in litigation over its Apple Watch, saying Masimo Corp. relied on an improper and "shifting" definition of a dispositive term.
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February 10, 2026
Voltage Infringing Shoals' Solar Patents, ITC Judge Rules
North Carolina-based Voltage LLC and a Chinese manufacturing company are infringing two patents on solar energy-related products held by Shoals Technologies Group, a U.S. International Trade Commission judge found.
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February 10, 2026
Broadcasters Fight 39% Media Ownership Cap In Hill Hearing
TV broadcasters told the U.S. Senate Tuesday that lawmakers never meant to permanently cap national audience share controlled by a single station owner at 39%, as conservative outlet Newsmax argued there's support from both the left and right for keeping the limit in place.
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February 10, 2026
Robinhood Asks Justices To Rein In Pre-IPO Disclosure Suits
Robinhood Markets Inc. is asking the U.S. Supreme Court to hear an investor dispute stemming from its $2.1 billion initial public offering, arguing that the Ninth Circuit's decision to revive the lawsuit "exposes companies seeking to go public to expansive liability."
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February 10, 2026
Social Media Cos. Must Face School In 1st Addiction MDL Trial
A California federal judge denied social media companies' bid for a summary judgment win on a bellwether school district's allegations it was forced to spend its limited resources on combating students' purported social media addictions, teeing up the first bellwether trial in the multidistrict litigation for June 15.
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February 10, 2026
Technology Group Of The Year: Wilson Sonsini
Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati PC's significant victories in high-profile cases, which included helping Google beat a $1.3 billion breach of contract claim over its digital advertising technology and assisting Via Transportation in netting almost $3.5 million in damages in a patent case, earned the firm a spot as a 2025 Law360 Technology Group of the Year.
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February 10, 2026
Apple, Google Offer App Store Measures Under New UK Rules
Britain's competition enforcer said Tuesday that Apple and Google have committed to fairness and transparency measures for their respective app stores, after the mobile platforms were designated as having strategic market status under the country's new digital regime.
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February 10, 2026
Tech Co. Ex-Workers Must Arbitrate Expenses Fight
Two opt-in workers signed arbitration agreements with a customer experience technology company, and thus their expense claims cannot remain in court, a Colorado federal judge ruled, administratively closing the case.
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February 10, 2026
NXP Semiconductors' GC To Retire In June
Semiconductor company NXP Semiconductors' longtime general counsel is set to retire later this year, with her deputy set to take over the top spot in her place.
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February 10, 2026
Paramount Amends Warner Bid To Cover Netflix Breakup Fee
Paramount Skydance Corp. said Tuesday it has sweetened its $30 per share, all-cash tender offer for Warner Bros. Discovery by adding new financial protections and regulatory assurances, and offering to pay the breakup fee if WBD walks away from its existing deal with Netflix.
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February 09, 2026
Meta Allows Pump-And-Dump Scam Ads, New Suit Says
A new proposed class action in California federal court alleges Meta Platforms Inc. knowingly allowed pump-and-dump scammers to advertise on its platform and to promote and falsely inflate the prices of certain stocks before selling their shares, gaining millions of dollars from Meta users.
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February 09, 2026
Fed. Circ. Mulls Whether Digital Ad Patent Can Survive Alice
An advertising management system company tried to persuade the Federal Circuit on Monday to revive its infringement suit against Google and YouTube, saying its patent was wrongly found to cover an abstract idea.
Expert Analysis
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Health, Legal Employers Face Unique Online Speech Hurdles
Employers in the legal and healthcare industries must consider distinctive ethical obligations and professional requirements when disciplining employees for social media posts, while anticipating an area of the law in flux as courts seek to balance speech rights and the workplace function, say attorneys at FordHarrison.
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Opinion
Justices Should Clarify Loper Bright Doctrine Via Patent Case
The U.S. Supreme Court should use the Lynk Labs v. Samsung patent case to provide urgently needed guidance on how last year’s Loper Bright decision should be applied to real-world questions of agency authority in the post-Chevron world, says Timothy Hsieh at Oklahoma City University School of Law.
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Reviewing 2025's Most Pertinent Wiretap Developments
2025 was a remarkable year in the world of web tracking wiretapping litigation, not only for the increased caseload but also because of numerous developing theories of liability, with disputes expected to continue unabated in 2026, say attorneys at Squire Patton.
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Del. Dispatch: Key 2025 Corporate Cases And Trends To Know
The Delaware corporate legal landscape saw notable changes in 2025, spurred by amendments to the Delaware General Corporation Law, ubiquitous artificial intelligence fervor, boardroom discussion around DExit, record shareholder activism activity and an arguably more expansive view of potential Caremark liability, say attorneys at Fried Frank.
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Series
Nature Photography Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Nature photography reminds me to focus on what is in front of me and to slow down to achieve success, and, in embracing the value of viewing situations through different lenses, offers skills transferable to the practice of law, says Brian Willett at Saul Ewing.
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How Cos. Can Roll With NY's New Algorithmic Pricing Rules
Despite uncertainty from New York’s new ban on artificial intelligence and computer algorithms for setting rents, and efforts to further restrict individualizing prices based on consumers' personal data, property managers, software providers and merchants can take several steps to stay compliant, say attorneys at Foley & Lardner.
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2025 State AI Laws Expand Liability, Raise Insurance Risks
As 2025 nears its end, claims professionals should be aware of trends in state legislation addressing artificial intelligence use, as insurance claims based on some of these liability-expanding statutes are a certainty, say attorneys at Wiley.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Practical Problem Solving
Issue-spotting skills are well honed in law school, but practicing attorneys must also identify clients’ problems and true goals, and then be able to provide solutions, says Mary Kate Hogan at Quarles & Brady.
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Crypto In 2025: From Federal Deregulation To State Action
The cryptocurrency enforcement landscape evolved in 2025, marked by federal deregulatory trends and active state attorney general enforcement, creating both opportunity and risk for businesses navigating the digital asset market, say attorneys at Cozen O'Connor.
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Intellectual Property Challenges In AI-Driven Drug Discovery
Given the adoption of artificial intelligence-based drug discovery platforms and the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's recent guidance on determining inventorship in AI-assisted inventions, practitioners must consider unprecedented questions regarding inventorship, patentability standards and infringement liability, says Paul Calvo at Sterne Kessler.
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Reel Justice: 'The Mastermind' And Juror Decision-Making
The recent art heist film “The Mastermind” forces viewers to discern the protagonist’s ambiguous motives and reconcile contradictions, offering lessons for attorneys about how a well-crafted trial narrative can tap into the psychological phenomena underlying juror decision-making, says Veronica Finkelstein at Wilmington University.
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Reviewing 2025's State And Federal AI Regulations
In light of increasing state and federal action to oversee the use of artificial intelligence, companies that develop or deploy the technology should keep abreast of current and forthcoming AI laws and consider their applicability to their business activities, says Jessica Brigman at Spencer Fane.
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Software Patents May Face New Eligibility Scrutiny
November guidance from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, along with recent litigation trends from the Federal Circuit, may encourage new challenges in the USPTO and district courts to artificial intelligence and software patents that rely on generic computing functions without concrete details, say attorneys at Venable.
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What Trump Order Limiting State AI Regs Means For Insurers
Last week's executive order seeking to preclude states from regulating artificial intelligence will likely have minimal impact on insurers, but the order and related congressional activities may portend a federal expectation of consistent state oversight of insurers' AI use, says Kathleen Birrane at DLA Piper.
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How Workforce, Tech Will Affect 2026 Construction Landscape
As the construction industry's center of gravity shifts from traditional commercial work to infrastructure, energy, industrial and data-hosting facilities, the effects of evolving technology and persistent labor shortages are reshaping real estate dealmaking, immigration policy debates and government contracting risk, say attorneys at Cozen O'Connor.