Try our Advanced Search for more refined results
Technology
-
October 24, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen the Financial Conduct Authority launch legal action against a Chinese cryptocurrency exchange, The Londoner magazine face a defamation claim from an entrepreneur accused of "scamming" Knightsbridge landlords, and Gucci sued by its cosmetics supplier as L'Oréal announces plans to buy the Italian fashion house's beauty brand. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.
-
October 23, 2025
Texas Dials Up Exposure With App Store, Telemarketing Laws
A new Texas age verification law and sweeping revisions to the state's telemarketing statute are poised to saddle the broad universe of companies that support mobile apps and disseminate marketing texts with new obligations that will open them up to more lawsuits and other legal risks, unless opponents find success with fledgling constitutional challenges.
-
October 23, 2025
EV-Maker Rivian Will Pay $250M To End Investors' Fraud Suit
Rivian Automotive Inc. investors asked a California federal judge Thursday to greenlight a $250 million settlement resolving their claims that the company underpriced its electric vehicles and misrepresented its profitability ahead of a blockbuster 2021 initial public offering, just one day before a summary judgment hearing.
-
October 23, 2025
DC Judge Won't Let Meta Claw Back Discovery Docs
A D.C. Superior Court judge on Thursday said that attorneys for Meta told researchers to modify their research into its platform's effects on teens' mental health to curtail liability, finding that the crime-fraud exception to communications between attorney and client applies.
-
October 23, 2025
OpenAI Reduced Suicide Safety Before Teen Died, Parents Say
OpenAI decided to remove some longstanding suicide prevention protocols and cut short its safety testing in the months before a California teenager died by suicide, according to an updated version of the wrongful death suit filed by the teen's parents in San Francisco County Superior Court.
-
October 23, 2025
Ex-Amazon Coder Says She's Turned Life Around Since Hack
A former Amazon.com Inc. coder who exposed the personal data of nearly 100 million people should be sent to prison, the U.S. government said in a new Seattle federal court filing that seeks a seven-year sentence for her.
-
October 23, 2025
Ky. Rep. Revives Attempt To Abolish PTAB, Expand Eligibility
U.S. Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., said Thursday he's again attempting to overhaul the patent system, including abolishing the Patent Trial and Appeal Board, normalizing injunctions and broadening what can be patented.
-
October 23, 2025
6th Circ. Probes State Power In Interstate Horse Race Betting
Sixth Circuit judges on Thursday appeared torn on the extent of states' abilities to control interstate wagering in their borders, challenging both Michigan on its licensing requirements that seem to contradict federal law and a betting platform's stance that the state has no say in how its residents bet on out-of-state horse races.
-
October 23, 2025
Split DC Circ. Won't Lift Block On FTC's Media Matters Probe
A divided D.C. Circuit panel refused Thursday to let the Federal Trade Commission subpoena Media Matters for America while the agency appeals an order blocking that probe, crediting district courts' findings of "seemingly unusual and unprecedented" facts suggesting the investigation is retaliation for reporting about Nazi content on X.
-
October 23, 2025
Google Rips $425M Privacy Verdict As Users Seek $2.4B More
A class of some 98 million cellphone users who won a $425 million jury verdict finding that Google unlawfully collected their information asked a California federal judge to make the tech giant disgorge another $2.36 billion, while Google asked the court to dismantle the class and vacate the verdict.
-
October 23, 2025
Walgreens Urges Pretrial Win In Shelf Space Fight
Electronics accessories manufacturer Zeikos Inc. should not be allowed to take its product placement contract suit against Walgreens to trial because it's clear Zeikos misinterpreted sales data that spurred an agreement the company itself never fully satisfied, the pharmacy retailer argued Wednesday.
-
October 23, 2025
NextGen Customers Seek Initial OK Of $19M Data Hack Deal
A Georgia federal judge was asked Wednesday to grant preliminary approval of a settlement that would end a proposed class action against NextGen Healthcare over a 2023 data hack that allegedly affected more than 1 million people.
-
October 23, 2025
RingConn Settles With Oura After ITC Import Ban
Ouraring Inc. has inked a deal allowing RingConn to keep its smart rings on the U.S. market following the U.S. International Trade Commission's decision to block Ultrahuman and RingConn from importing products it held infringed a wearable computing device patent.
-
October 23, 2025
Ex-Copyright Leaders, Media Groups Back Cox Piracy Liability
Media industry groups, former lawmakers and copyright officials are among the parties supporting music companies fighting an appeal from Cox Communications in the U.S. Supreme Court and urging the justices in nearly a dozen amicus briefs to hold internet service providers accountable for their customers' online piracy.
-
October 23, 2025
Lending App EarnIn Users Must Arbitrate NC Class Claims
Users of payday loan app EarnIn must arbitrate claims that the company's cash advance product violates North Carolina's consumer protection laws, a federal judge ruled, finding that the users clearly agreed to arbitration when they signed up for the app.
-
October 23, 2025
Ga. Civil Engineering Co. Hit With Data Breach Class Action
A Georgia civil engineering firm was hit with a proposed class action over a 2024 data breach, as a former employee sharply criticized the company for taking weeks to resolve the hack and over nine months to report it.
-
October 23, 2025
Paychex Beats Privacy Suit Over 2024 Data Breach, For Now
Paychex defeated, for now, a suit filed by a woman who alleged it allowed hackers to access her bank accounts by failing to keep her personal information safe from a data breach, after a Pennsylvania federal judge said Wednesday her complaint "stops short of saying how" Paychex's conduct led to her injury.
-
October 23, 2025
FCC's Carr Sees Ongoing Consumer Harm From Shutdown
The head of the Federal Communications Commission warned Thursday that new device and license applications are "just sitting there," creating an FCC backlog, and that other day-to-day but important work remains on hold during the government shutdown.
-
October 23, 2025
Neb. Republican Says Fiber Critical To Broadband Effort
A Republican U.S. senator said Thursday she's concerned that rural areas will not receive enough funding for fiber-optic connectivity in the latest round of the government's multibillion-dollar effort to build out broadband to underserved areas.
-
October 23, 2025
Tech Org. Calls Next-Gen TV Tuner Mandate Bad Idea
As the Federal Communications Commission solicits opinions on how to usher the industry into the next generation of television broadcasting, a consumer technology trade group is reiterating its argument that the agency should not rush the process and let companies do what they will.
-
October 23, 2025
Mich. Hospitals Seek To Shake Patient Data-Tracking Suit
Michigan healthcare facilities said a proposed class action alleging they improperly used data-tracking pixel tools to collect and share patients' private information shouldn't proceed, telling a federal judge Wednesday that the patients haven't claimed they experienced any harmful use of their information.
-
October 23, 2025
High Court Urged To Review Police Use Of Geofencing Data
A Texas man has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to consider whether law enforcement violated his rights when police used anonymized bulk Google data they obtained through a warrant in an attempt to locate him and whether that constitutes an illegal search.
-
October 23, 2025
One Nuclear Energy To Go Public Via $1B SPAC Merger
One Nuclear Energy LLC, led by Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP, on Thursday unveiled plans to go public through a merger with Sidley Austin LLP-guided special purpose acquisition company Hennessy Capital Investment Corp. VII, in a deal that values the energy company at $1 billion in pre-money equity.
-
October 23, 2025
Del. Startup Accuses Ex-CEO In Chancery Of Stock Scheme
A Delaware pharmaceutical startup has sued its former CEO in the Delaware Chancery Court, accusing him of secretly enriching himself through unauthorized stock issuances and deceptive loans.
-
October 23, 2025
Senate Clears Bill For FCC List Of Foreign Authorizations
The U.S. Senate Thursday passed a bill requiring the Federal Communications Commission to publish a list of companies with ties to certain foreign countries that hold FCC authorizations.
Expert Analysis
-
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.
-
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.
-
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.
-
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.
-
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.
-
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.
-
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.
-
How Banks Can Harness New Customer ID Rule's Flexibility
Banking regulators' update to the customer identification process, allowing banks to collect some information from third parties rather than directly from customers, helps modernize anti-money laundering compliance and carries advantages for financial institutions that embrace the new approach, say attorneys at Bradley Arant.
-
Series
Playing Soccer Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Soccer has become a key contributor to how I approach my work, and the lessons I’ve learned on the pitch about leadership, adaptability, resilience and communication make me better at what I do every day in my legal career, says Whitney O’Byrne at MoFo.
-
How Trump Cybersecurity EO Narrows Biden-Era Standards
President Donald Trump recently signed Executive Order No. 14306, which significantly narrows the scope and ambition of a Biden executive order focused on raising federal cybersecurity standards among federal vendors, say attorneys at Jenner & Block.
-
Opinion
The SEC Should Embrace Tokenized Equity, Not Strangle It
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission should grant no-action relief to firms ready to pilot tokenized equity trading, not delay innovation by heeding protectionist industry arguments, says J.W. Verret at George Mason University.
-
Compliance Changes On Deck For Banks Under Texas AI Law
Financial services companies, including banks and fintechs, should evaluate their artificial intelligence usage to prepare for Texas' newly passed law regulating AI governance, noting that the enforcement provisions provide for an affirmative defense to liability, say attorneys at Mitchell Sandler.
-
Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Learning From Failure
While law school often focuses on the importance of precision, correctness and perfection, mistakes are inevitable in real-world practice — but failure is not the opposite of progress, and real talent comes from the ability to recover, rethink and reshape, says Brooke Pauley at Tucker Ellis.
-
23andMe Fine Signals ICO's New GDPR Enforcement Focus
Many of the cybersecurity failures identified by the Information Commissioner’s Office in its investigation of 23andMe, recently resulting in a £2.3 million fine, were basic lapses, but the ICO's focus on several new U.K. General Data Protection Regulation considerations will likely carry into the future, say lawyers at Womble Bond.
-
Midyear Rewind: How Courts Are Reshaping VPPA Standards
The first half of 2025 saw a series of cases interpreting the Video Privacy Protection Act as applied to website tracking technologies, including three appellate rulings deepening circuit splits on what qualifies as personally identifiable information and who qualifies as a consumer under the statute, say attorneys at Perkins Coie.