Technology

  • January 07, 2026

    Warner Bros. Again Tells Shareholders To Nix Paramount Bid

    Warner Bros. Discovery on Wednesday implored shareholders to reject Paramount Skydance Corp.'s amended hostile takeover offer, saying the media conglomerate remains committed to the $82.7 billion deal it reached with Netflix in December.

  • January 07, 2026

    DOJ Seeks Nod For HPE Merger Deal Over State Objections

    The U.S. Department of Justice has requested court approval for its settlement that would end a challenge of Hewlett Packard Enterprise's acquisition of a networking equipment rival, despite objections raised by state enforcers over allegations of improper lobbying influence.

  • January 07, 2026

    Fed. Circ. Faults Lower Court In Parking Patent Case

    The Federal Circuit said a new trial is needed to determine if a parking lot management patent is invalid under a rule prohibiting patents for technologies that were used or were on sale for more than a year before a patent application is filed.

  • January 07, 2026

    Compass' $1.6B Anywhere Buy Goes Unchallenged By Government

    Real estate brokerage Compass Inc.'s $1.6 billion acquisition of Anywhere Real Estate Inc. is expected to move forward Wednesday without being scrutinized by the federal government even though congressional lawmakers previously urged the government to do so.

  • January 07, 2026

    3 Firms Guide Apollo's $3.5B Data Center Financing

    Apollo-managed funds and affiliates provided $3.5 billion to a fund managed by Valor Equity Partners, a financing arranged by Latham & Watkins, Proskauer Rose and Sullivan & Cromwell that will back the acquisition and lease of data center infrastructure to Elon Musk's xAI Corp.

  • January 07, 2026

    Simpson Thacher Advises As Data Center Biz Gets $1.9B

    Investment firm KKR and private equity firm Oak Hill Capital on Wednesday said they will contribute approximately $1.9 billion in investments for European data center company Global Technical Realty, with Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP advising.

  • January 07, 2026

    Paul Weiss-Led D-Wave To Buy Quantum Circuits For $550M

    Paul Weiss Rifkind Wharton & Garrison LLP-advised quantum computing company D-Wave Quantum Inc. unveiled plans Wednesday to acquire Quantum Circuits Inc. in a $550 million cash and stock deal.

  • January 06, 2026

    11th Circ. Backs FTC Win In False Ad Suit Against Corpay

    The Eleventh Circuit on Tuesday affirmed the U.S. Federal Trade Commission's win in its lawsuit against Corpay Inc., saying in a published opinion that "overwhelming" evidence backed a lower court's finding that the company engaged in deceptive advertising and unfair billing practices when marketing and selling fuel cards.

  • January 06, 2026

    Texas Court Reverses Halt On Samsung's TV Data Collection

    A Texas state judge Tuesday lifted his temporary block on Samsung deploying technology that the state's attorney general has alleged the television maker is using to unlawfully spy on viewers and harvest their data.

  • January 06, 2026

    Judiciary Advisers Predict Clashes Over AI, Remote Testimony

    The federal judiciary's policy advisers appeared divided Tuesday over efforts to align procedural rules with digital age technology and preferences, and they predicted a torrent of impassioned input if they open up their delicate internal debates to the entire public.

  • January 06, 2026

    Section 230 Knocks Down Addiction MDL, Meta Tells 9th Circ.

    Meta Platforms Inc. urged a Ninth Circuit panel on Tuesday to find that Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act shields it from sprawling social-media-addiction multidistrict litigation, arguing that the claims go to "the heart of what the statute intends to protect."

  • January 06, 2026

    Rakoff Rules Software Co. Ex-Chair Tried To Defraud His Co.

    U.S. District Judge Jed S. Rakoff said he barred the ex-chairman of a software investment company, Invisalign inventor Zia Chishti, from trying to transfer money out of the United States to avoid a $9 million arbitral award because Chishti intended to defraud his former company.

  • January 06, 2026

    Ex-Robbins Geller Attys' New Firm To Lead Securities Suit

    A new firm by former partners of Bernstein Litowitz Berger & Grossmann LLP and Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd LLP has secured its first lead counsel appointment in a securities suit against National Instruments Corp., which alleges the company repurchased stock while concealing from investors it was considering being acquired.

  • January 06, 2026

    FDA To Ease Regulation Of Wearables, Decision Software

    U.S. Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Marty Makary touted new federal guidance on Tuesday that he said would promote innovation by making it easier to bring certain kinds of wearable devices and clinical-decision software to market without a strict regulatory review.

  • January 06, 2026

    Ramey Blocked As Atty In Image Patent Fight In NY

    Intellectual property attorney William Ramey was prevented from representing the owner of image processing and modifying patents used in special eyeglasses in an infringement suit in New York federal court, leading the company to abandon the case.

  • January 06, 2026

    Envestnet Trade Secrets Suit Cleared For Trial

    A Delaware federal judge has cleared the way for a long-running fintech trade secrets case to proceed toward trial, overruling defense objections to spoliation findings and holding that a jury may infer that destroyed electronic evidence would have been unfavorable to Envestnet Inc. and its former subsidiary Yodlee Inc.

  • January 06, 2026

    Coupang Brass Face Suit Over Alleged Cybersecurity Failures

    The top brass of e-commerce company Coupang Inc. have been sued in California federal court by a shareholder who claims the company's executives and directors failed to maintain adequate cybersecurity protocols, leading to a data breach that exposed the personal information of millions of customers.

  • January 06, 2026

    Atty Apologizes For ChatGPT-Hallucinated Citations In Briefs

    A patent attorney has apologized to a Kansas federal judge for submitting a court filing with case citations hallucinated by ChatGPT, calling the experience "shameful and embarrassing" and saying he was in a poor mental state at the time due to his mother and aunt being hospitalized and dying shortly after.

  • January 06, 2026

    TwinSpires Gets Green Light For Mich. Online Horse Betting

    Michigan horse racing authorities cannot block betting platform TwinSpires from users in the state after a federal judge on Tuesday affirmed an earlier ruling that federal law overrides Michigan's licensing rules.

  • January 06, 2026

    Ropes-Advised Buyout Firm BV Beats Target With $2.5B Raise

    Boston-based private equity firm BV Investment Partners said Tuesday that it has closed its latest fund at $2.46 billion, exceeding an initial $2 billion target, with Ropes & Gray LLP advising.

  • January 06, 2026

    Rick Perry's AI Energy Co. Hit With Post-IPO Lawsuit

    An artificial intelligence infrastructure company co-founded by former Texas Gov. Rick Perry is facing a proposed class action accusing it of overselling its key development in order to secure $745.7 million through an initial public offering.

  • January 06, 2026

    Top Groups Lobbying The FCC

    Groups lobbying the Federal Communications Commission stayed busy in December as the agency closed out a year of rapid change, with advocates focused on satellite spectrum sharing, amateur radio rules, network recovery on the U.S. Virgin Islands, and more.

  • January 06, 2026

    OpenAI Says Cameo Lacks Name Recognition For TM Claim

    Artificial intelligence startup OpenAI has asked a California federal judge to dismiss part of a trademark infringement suit brought by celebrity video service Cameo, saying Cameo hasn't shown its mark is well-known enough to support a dilution claim.

  • January 06, 2026

    Google Wants One Complaint From Ad Tech Rivals, Not Six

    Google has asked a New York federal judge to tee up a bid to forcibly consolidate half a dozen antitrust lawsuits from rivals accusing Google of hobbling their advertising placement technology businesses, arguing one combined complaint would be more efficient for the lawsuits bearing "substantial similarities."

  • January 06, 2026

    Groups Again Push Fed. Circ. To Eye 'Settled Expectations'

    The latest petition challenging the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's use of "settled expectations" based on a patent's age to deny reviews has gotten support from several industry groups, which told the Federal Circuit the policy will cause "severe damage" to the patent system.

Expert Analysis

  • Compliance Steps To Take As FCRA Enforcement Widens

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    As the Fair Credit Reporting Act receives renewed focus from both federal and state enforcers, regulatory and litigation risk is most acute in several core areas, which companies can address by implementing purpose processes and quick remediation of consumer complaints, among other steps, say attorneys at Wiley.

  • Trends In Post-Grant Practice Since USPTO Denial Guidance

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    Six months after the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office updated its guidance on discretionary denial of inter partes review and post-grant review, noteworthy trends in denial statistics have emerged, warranting a reassessment of strategies for parallel proceedings, says Andrew Ramos at Bayes.

  • Reviewing EU Competition Policy 1 Year After Draghi's Report

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    Implementation of the Mario Draghi report’s proposals to revamp European Union competition policy is currently case-specific, making it less visible, and more needs to be done in the way of merger review and antitrust enforcement, say lawyers at Linklaters.

  • How Calif. Law Cracks Down On Algorithmic Price-Fixing

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    Gov. Gavin Newsom signed two laws this month significantly expanding state antitrust enforcement and civil and criminal penalties for the use or distribution of shared pricing algorithms, as the U.S. Department of Justice has recently wielded the Sherman Act to challenge algorithmic pricing, say attorneys at Pillsbury.

  • USPTO Under Squires: A Look At The First Month

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    New U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Director John Squires' opening acts — substantive and symbolic — signal a posture that is more welcoming to technological improvements and focused on rebalancing the office's gatekeeping role, say attorneys at Seyfarth.

  • Opinion

    Expert Reports Can't Replace Facts In Securities Fraud Cases

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    The Ninth Circuit's 2023 decision in Nvidia v. Ohman Fonder — and the U.S. Supreme Court's punt on the case in 2024 — could invite the meritless securities litigation the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act was designed to prevent by substituting expert opinions for facts to substantiate complaint assertions, say attorneys at A&O Shearman.

  • Glimmers Of Clarity Appear Amid Open Banking Disarray

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    The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's vacillation over data rights rules has created uncertainty, but a recent proposal is a strong signal that open banking regulations are here to stay, making now the ideal time for entities to take action to decrease compliance risk, says Adam Maarec at McGlinchey Stafford.

  • Opinion

    High Court, Not A Single Justice, Should Decide On Recusal

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    As public trust in the U.S. Supreme Court continues to decline, the court should adopt a collegial framework in which all justices decide questions of recusal together — a reform that respects both judicial independence and due process for litigants, say Michael Broyde at Emory University and Hayden Hall at the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware.

  • FTC's Consumer Finance Pivot Brings Industry Pros And Cons

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    An active Federal Trade Commission against the backdrop of a leashed Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will be welcomed by most in the consumer finance industry, but the incremental expansion of the FTC's authority via enforcement actions remains a risk, say attorneys at Hudson Cook.

  • Amazon Ruling Marks New Era Of Personal Liability For Execs

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    A Washington federal court's recent decision in FTC v. Amazon extended personal liability to senior executives for design-driven violations of broad consumer protection statutes, signaling a fundamental shift in how consumer protection laws may be enforced against large public companies, say attorneys at Orrick.

  • 3 New Cyberinsurance Rulings Aid In Policy Interpretation

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    Although the cyberinsurance market has exploded, there is no standardized cyber language or form and only a few court decisions thus far interpreting cyberinsurance policy language, making these three recent rulings key for guiding policyholders, insurers and brokers, say attorneys at Haynes Boone.

  • USPTO Panel's Reversal Signals A Shift On AI Patents

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    A recent patent ruling from a U.S. Patent and Trademark Office panel shows that artificial intelligence technologies remain patent-eligible when properly framed as technical solutions, and provides valuable drafting lessons for counsel, say attorneys at Butzel Long.

  • Series

    Traveling Solo Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Traveling by myself has taught me to assess risk, understand tone and stay calm in high-pressure situations, which are not only useful life skills, but the foundation of how I support my clients, says Lacey Gutierrez at Group Five Legal.

  • Latest PTAB Moves Suggest A Subtle Recalibration

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    Recent decisions from the Patent Trial and Appeal Board, as U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Director John Squires transitions into his new role, offer new procedural and substantive tools for patent owners in procuring patent rights and enforcing them against would-be petitioners, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.

  • NY Zelle Suit Highlights Fraud Risks Of Electronic Payments

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    The New York attorney general's recent action against Zelle's parent company, filed several months after the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau abandoned a similar suit, demonstrates the fraud risks that electronic payment platforms can present and the need for providers to carefully balance accessibility and consumer protection, say attorneys at Weiner Brodsky.

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