Technology

  • December 17, 2025

    5th Circ. Finds 'Truffle,' Reverses Samsung Battery Suit

    A Seventh Circuit opinion has convinced the Fifth Circuit to reverse its decision forcing Samsung SDI Co. Ltd. to face a lawsuit over burn injuries a man suffered when one of the company's batteries exploded in his pocket, suggesting the company didn't do a great job making its case the first time around.

  • December 17, 2025

    Nvidia Settles Valeo's Suit Over Stolen Driving Assist Code

    Nvidia Corp. has settled automotive tech supplier Valeo's lawsuit that accused the artificial intelligence chipmaker of using trade secrets a former Valeo engineer stole before joining Nvidia and later accidentally left on his screen during a videoconference call with Valeo.

  • December 17, 2025

    Late Plaintiff Substitutions Sink Hospital Health Data Suit

    A Pennsylvania federal judge has dismissed a proposed data breach class action against Thomas Jefferson University Hospitals Inc. over the named plaintiffs purported inability to serve as leaders of the suit, ruling that they had two years to find substitutes.

  • December 17, 2025

    Sterne Kessler Draws Scolding, But No Sanctions Midtrial

    A Delaware federal judge said Wednesday she wasn't happy with the tone used by attorneys defending a radiopharmaceutical company from patent infringement claims and that she does not condone the attorneys' conduct in improperly contacting three inventors named in a patent at issue, but she declined to issue the severe sanction of kicking them off the case.

  • December 17, 2025

    Meta Blamed For Teens' Instagram 'Sextortion' Suicides

    The parents of a 16-year-old boy from Scotland and a 13-year-old boy from Pennsylvania blame Meta and Instagram for their children dying by suicide after being "sextorted" through the photo sharing platform, alleging in a lawsuit Wednesday that the social media companies know the app connects predators to children.

  • December 17, 2025

    Lawmakers Raise Concerns Over Nexstar's $6.2B Tegna Deal

    A group of Democratic lawmakers has urged federal enforcers to closely scrutinize Nexstar Media Group Inc.'s planned $6.2 billion purchase of rival broadcast company Tegna Inc. and to block the deal if they find it violates the law.

  • December 17, 2025

    Senate Dems, FCC Tangle Over Agency's 'Independent' Status

    The Federal Communications Commission's Republican chair faced off Wednesday against Senate Democrats, who accused him of trying to muffle dissenting political views and gutting the telecommunications regulator's longstanding independence.

  • December 17, 2025

    ASUSTeK Gets Albright To Send 3 Patent Cases To Calif.

    A Texas federal judge on Wednesday transferred to California a patent owner's suits accusing Taiwanese computer company ASUSTeK of infringing numerous patents, finding the Golden State is the more convenient place for the litigation.

  • December 17, 2025

    29 State AGs Want Unified Meta Youth Addiction Trial

    A group of 29 states and their attorneys general is doubling down on a request in California federal court to hold a single, unified trial in their suit claiming Meta Platforms Inc. is designed to addict and harm minors, saying they have now identified another case where such a singular trial was held involving multiple attorneys general's claims.

  • December 17, 2025

    Repair Co. Not Owed Coverage For Damage Scheme Suits

    A company that repairs tubular air heaters and its founder were not entitled to coverage for a criminal case and a civil suit alleging that they defrauded customers by deliberately damaging property in order to secure repair jobs, an Illinois federal court ruled.

  • December 17, 2025

    Crypto Card Co. Claims Millions Lost To Counterfeit Scheme

    A Florida-based cryptocurrency trading card company claimed in Colorado federal court Wednesday that a man obtained counterfeit versions of its "Currency Series 1" cards and attempted to sell them on Facebook.

  • December 17, 2025

    Bill Would Ease Copyright Registration For Visual Artists

    Visual artists would have a simplified and cheaper copyright registration process under a bill introduced Wednesday by Tennessee Republican U.S. Sen. Marsha Blackburn.

  • December 17, 2025

    Ill. Judge Grants Transit Co.'s Bid To Arbitrate GIPA Claims

    An Illinois federal judge sent to arbitration a proposed class action claiming those applying to work for a transit services provider were required to divulge family medical history during a preemployment physical in violation of Illinois' genetic privacy law, finding the lead plaintiff had agreed to arbitrate disputes as part of his application process.

  • December 17, 2025

    Great American Says Cryo Unit Co. Hid Facts In Getting Policy

    Insurer Great American has gone to California federal court asserting that it doesn't owe coverage to a cryotherapy unit seller for an underlying lawsuit involving an alleged injury in a hyperbaric chamber at the company's subsidiary, arguing that the cryotherapy company never told the insurer it had a subsidiary.

  • December 17, 2025

    PG&E Electrical Transformer Bomber Gets 10 Years In Calif.

    A California federal judge Wednesday sentenced a San Jose software engineer to 10 years in prison for willfully bombing Pacific Gas & Electric Co. electrical transformers using homemade explosives in late 2022 and early 2023, the U.S. Department of Justice announced.

  • December 17, 2025

    Fenwick-Led Healthcare Platform Tebra Secures $250M

    Electronic healthcare platform Tebra, led by Fenwick & West LLP, on Wednesday revealed that it secured $250 million in new equity and debt financing, which will be used for research and development in artificial intelligence and automation.

  • December 17, 2025

    EFF Loses Fed. Circ. Appeal Over Patent Case Intervention

    The Federal Circuit on Wednesday tossed the Electronic Frontier Foundation's challenge to a Texas federal court's denial of its bid to intervene in a now-settled patent dispute between Entropic and Charter Communications, agreeing the digital rights nonprofit waited too long.

  • December 17, 2025

    Anker, Ugreen Near Peace In Mobile Power Bank Patent Suit

    Electronics-makers Anker and Ugreen have reached a tentative agreement to end Anker's intellectual property claims accusing its rival of infringing a patent for a mobile power bank and marketing "virtually identical" products to consumers.

  • December 17, 2025

    2nd Circ. Affirms Dismissal Of Mobileye Shareholder Suit

    The Second Circuit on Tuesday affirmed the dismissal of a proposed investor class action accusing Intel unit Mobileye of artificially inflating its stock by concealing how a supply glut was going to impact profits, finding the plaintiffs failed to identify any misleading statements made by company executives.

  • December 17, 2025

    Coursera, Udemy Merging Into $2.5B Online Education Co.

    Online education company Coursera said Wednesday it has agreed to buy rival Udemy in an all-stock deal valuing the combined company at about $2.5 billion, as the firms look to scale their platforms amid rising demand for job-ready skills driven by artificial intelligence.

  • December 17, 2025

    DOJ Says Live Nation Can't Avoid Jury In Antitrust Case

    The Justice Department wants a New York federal judge to force Live Nation to face a jury next year on allegations it bought, coerced and leveraged its way to live performance dominance, arguing in a newly unsealed brief that there are too many factual disputes to upstage the lawsuit.

  • December 17, 2025

    Adobe Infringed Copyrights To Train AI Model, Writer Says

    A writer hit Adobe with a proposed class action in California federal court Tuesday, alleging the software giant illegally used copyrighted books in the "RedPajama" dataset to train its artificial intelligence large-language models, marking the latest development in a wave of litigation over tech companies' use of the controversial dataset.

  • December 17, 2025

    Fed. Circ. Upholds Ax Of Patent From Settled Apple Case

    The Federal Circuit on Wednesday refused to revive a patent for using credit cards on mobile devices, backing the Patent Trial and Appeal Board's finding that Apple was able to prove the patent was invalid.

  • December 17, 2025

    Fed. Circ. Backs $162K Fee Win For Vizio In Ramey Case

    The Federal Circuit on Wednesday affirmed that a patent owner represented by embattled firm Ramey LLP must pay Walmart Inc.-owned television maker Vizio Inc. nearly $162,000 in attorney fees for bringing a "weak" patent suit and litigating it in an "unreasonable" manner.

  • December 17, 2025

    Judge Temporarily Blocks German Patent Case Against BMW

    A Texas federal judge has issued a temporary restraining order against a patent company from pursuing legal action against carmaker BMW in German court, after BMW said the company was making an "unprecedented" legal move by pursuing an injunction in German court related to U.S. patents.

Expert Analysis

  • AI's Role In Google Antitrust Suit May Reshape Tech Markets

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    The evolution of AI in retail has reshaped the U.S.' antitrust case against Google, which could both benefit small business innovators and consumers, and fundamentally alter future antitrust cases, including the Federal Trade Commission's lawsuit against Amazon, says Graham Dufault at ACT.

  • Series

    The Biz Court Digest: How It Works In Massachusetts

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    Since its founding in 2000, the Massachusetts Business Litigation Session's expertise, procedural flexibility and litigant-friendly case management practices have contributed to the development of a robust body of commercial jurisprudence, say James Donnelly at Mirick O’Connell, Felicia Ellsworth at WilmerHale and Lisa Wood at Foley Hoag.

  • Viral 'Brewers Karen' Incident Teaches Employers To Act Fast

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    An attorney who was terminated after a viral video showed her threatening to call U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement on an opposing team's fan at a Milwaukee Brewers game underscores why employers must take prompt action when learning of viral incidents involving employees, says Joseph Myers at Mesidor.

  • State Child Privacy Laws May Put More Cos. In FTC's Reach

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    Starting with Texas in January, several new state laws requiring app stores to share user age-related information with developers will likely subject significantly more companies to the Federal Trade Commission’s child privacy rules, altering their compliance obligations, say attorneys at Womble Bond.

  • Why Appellees Should Write Their Answering Brief First

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    Though counterintuitive, appellees should consider writing their answering briefs before they’ve ever seen their opponent’s opening brief, as this practice confers numerous benefits related to argument structure, time pressures and workflow, says Joshua Sohn at the U.S. Department of Justice.

  • Questions To Ask Your Client When Fraud Taints Financing

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    As elevated risk levels yield fertile conditions for fraud in financing transactions, asking corporate clients the right investigative questions can help create an action plan, bring parties together and help clients successfully survive any scam, says Mark Kirsons at Morgan Lewis.

  • How CGL Policies May Respond To Novel AI Psychosis Claims

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    As courts and regulators begin to confront the realities of mental and physical injuries allegedly induced by artificial intelligence chatbots, commercial general liability insurers will need to reevaluate policy language, underwriting practices and claims handling protocols to address this emerging risk landscape, say attorneys at Wiley.

  • Federal Acquisition Rules Get Measured Makeover

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    The Trump administration's promised overhaul of the Federal Acquisition Regulation is not a revolution in rules, but a meaningful recalibration of procurement practice that gives contracting officers more space to think, to tailor and to try, say attorneys at Mayer Brown.

  • Series

    Mindfulness Meditation Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Mindful meditation enables me to drop the ego, and in helping me to keep sight of what’s important, permits me to learn from the other side and become a reliable counselor, says Roy Wyman at Bass Berry.

  • Growth, Harmonization In Focus As Hague System Turns 100

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    One hundred years after its establishment, the Hague System has grown into an important pillar of international design protection, offering a promising path toward even greater harmonization in design law as its geographic reach continues to expand, say attorneys at Sterne Kessler.

  • AI Litigation Tools Can Enhance Case Assessment, Strategy

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    Civil litigators can use artificial intelligence tools to strengthen case assessment and aid in early strategy development, as long as they address the risks and ethical considerations that accompany these uses, say attorneys at Barnes & Thornburg.

  • Post-Genius Landscape Reveals Technical Stablecoin Hurdles

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    The Genius Act's implementation has revealed challenges for mass stablecoin adoption, but there are several factors that stablecoin issuers can use to differentiate themselves and secure market share, including interest rate, liquidity, and safety and security, say attorneys at Olshan Frome.

  • The Emerging Issues Shaping Real Estate Project Insurance

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    As real estate faces increasingly complex considerations — such as climate losses, "nuclear verdicts" and regulatory changes — insurance is evolving into a strategic function that should be discussed early in the planning stages of a project, says Jason Adams at Cox Castle.

  • How Employers Should Reshape AI Use As Laws Evolve

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    As laws and regulations on the use of artificial intelligence in employment evolve, organizations can maximize the innovative benefits of workplace AI tools and mitigate their risks by following a few key strategies, including designing tools for auditability and piloting them in states with flexible rules, say attorneys at Cooley.

  • How '24 Statements Show FTC's Direction On Political Speech

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    Two top Federal Trade Commission officials made concurring statements in 2024 that detailed a potential push to protect political speech, which have served as a preview of the commission's potential new focus on investigating social media and financial services firms to secure changes in those companies' internal business practices, says Benjamin Goldman at Montgomery McCracken.

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