Try our Advanced Search for more refined results
Technology
-
February 26, 2026
Chancery OKs Atty Exit Over 'Irreparably Broken' Relationship
The Delaware Chancery Court on Thursday granted a motion allowing counsel for an educational software company co-founder's ex-wife and her affiliated family limited partnership to withdraw from a stockholder dispute involving the educational software company, while giving the partnership two weeks to secure new representation or face default.
-
February 26, 2026
Longtime Adviser To Tech Cos. Joins Orrick From Perkins Coie
An attorney who combined her boutique with Perkins Coie LLP in 2022 to help launch its New York emerging companies and venture capital practice is transitioning to Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP, the firm announced Wednesday.
-
February 26, 2026
WilmerHale Adds Biden-Harris WH Atty, Ex-Campaign GC
WilmerHale has rehired a former senior White House lawyer who served as the general counsel for the Biden-Harris reelection campaign and later for the Harris-Walz presidential campaign, the firm announced Thursday.
-
February 26, 2026
USTR Seeks Input On Crafting Critical Mineral Supply Pact
The U.S. Trade Representative on Thursday asked the public to weigh in on the design of an agreement to secure critical minerals and trade policies around those resources.
-
February 26, 2026
3 Federal Circuit Clashes To Watch In March
The Federal Circuit will consider a pair of nine-figure patent cases next month, as ClearPlay seeks to revive a $469 million verdict against Dish Network that a judge threw out, while Netlist aims to preserve a $303 million finding that Samsung infringed its patents, and undo decisions invalidating them.
-
February 25, 2026
OCC Unveils Landmark Stablecoin Rule Proposal
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency took a significant step Wednesday toward standing up its oversight framework for stablecoin issuers, proposing rules that lay out how licensing will work, what activities will be allowed and what prudential standards will apply.
-
February 25, 2026
FTC Backs Age Verification Use With New Enforcement Stance
The Federal Trade Commission said Wednesday that it won't use its enforcement authority under the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act to bring actions against certain websites and services that collect kids' personal information without parental consent for the sole purpose of verifying users' ages.
-
February 25, 2026
DOJ Settles With IT Co. It Said Hurt US Workers With AI Ads
The U.S. Department of Justice's Civil Rights Division announced Wednesday that it reached a settlement with a Virginia-based IT services company it alleged posted job advertisements generated by an artificial intelligence tool that included language restricting consideration only to certain foreign applicants.
-
February 25, 2026
Social Media Contributed To Mental Health Issues, Jury Hears
A therapist who treated the plaintiff in a landmark bellwether trial alleging Instagram and YouTube harm children's mental health told a California jury Wednesday that social media use contributed to the plaintiff's struggles, while acknowledging that social media addiction is not a diagnosis formally recognized in her field.
-
February 25, 2026
Senate Bill Would Make Gov't Admit It Perused Your Emails
Courts issue hundreds of thousands of criminal surveillance orders each year, allowing law enforcement to spy on suspects beyond the bounds of what is normally legal, but a bill reintroduced Wednesday in the U.S. Senate aims to shed light on the process by informing someone when the government wanted their digital information.
-
February 25, 2026
DCG Crypto Class Action Proceeds, But State Law Claims Cut
Digital Currency Group must face a proposed class action accusing it of trying to conceal a $1.1 billion debt crisis from lenders through a "sham transaction" with its crypto-lending subsidiary, but a Connecticut federal judge cut state law claims on the grounds that they overlapped with the suit's federal securities claims and could delay the action if allowed to remain.
-
February 25, 2026
Lawsuit Over Recalled Lowe's Batteries Tossed, For Now
Tool company Chervon North America Inc. and retailer Lowe's Home Centers LLC have, for now, beaten a proposed class action accusing them of selling lithium-ion batteries that caught fire, after an Illinois federal judge ruled that the buyer failed to point to any particular "promise regarding safety."
-
February 25, 2026
Alibaba Faces Wash. Spam Suit Over Text Referral Program
Alibaba has been hit with a proposed class action claiming the e-commerce giant sent tens of thousands of text messages to Washington state consumers in violation of the Washington Consumer Electronic Mail Act, which is meant to guard residents against advertising spam.
-
February 25, 2026
CFTC Warns Against Prediction Market Insider Trading
The CFTC on Wednesday warned prediction market traders it "has full authority to police illegal trading practices" on regulated platforms as it flagged two penalties Kalshi levied against an editor for popular internet video brand MrBeast and a California political candidate who each allegedly flouted the platform's insider trading rules.
-
February 25, 2026
Nvidia Says YouTubers' AI Scraping Suit Undermines Fair Use
Nvidia urged a California federal judge to nix a lawsuit alleging it circumvented measures to scrape data from YouTube videos to train its AI model, arguing Monday the Digital Millennium Copyright Act doesn't prohibit circumvention of measures that prevent copying — which allows the public to make fair use of copyrighted works.
-
February 25, 2026
Netflix Swaps Out Latham For Munger Tolles In Antitrust Suit
Latham & Watkins LLP withdrew Wednesday as defense counsel for Netflix in a proposed consumer class action in Illinois federal court claiming Meta cut an illegal deal ceding the video streaming market to Netflix, which is now represented by Munger Tolles & Olson LLP.
-
February 25, 2026
Valve Promotes Illegal Gambling In Its Games, NY AG Claims
The New York attorney general Wednesday sued Valve Corp., claiming the video game developer has been illegally promoting gambling to children through games like Counter-Strike by "enticing" them to pay for chances to win virtual items, some of which can be rare and hold significant monetary value.
-
February 25, 2026
Fed. Circ. Told New Ruling Backs Patent Win Against Amazon
Software company Kove IO Inc. told the Federal Circuit that the court's ruling in a recent case undermines Amazon's argument that a $673 million judgment against it for infringing cloud data storage patents should be thrown out.
-
February 25, 2026
It's Kickoff Time For FCC Look At Sports Media Marketplace
Sports streaming's rise and the impact of a fragmenting sports programming marketplace on local broadcasters will get new attention from regulators at the Federal Communications Commission.
-
February 25, 2026
Florida Co. Blames Holland & Hart For $21M Judgment
A Florida-based company claimed in Colorado federal court Wednesday that a Holland & Hart LLP attorney was negligent in representing it in a lawsuit from the city of Fort Collins that eventually ended in a more than $21 million judgment against the company.
-
February 25, 2026
T-Mobile Tells Justices FCC's Fines On 'Unsound' Footing
T-Mobile waded Wednesday into a high-stakes U.S. Supreme Court fight between its rivals AT&T and Verizon and the Federal Communications Commission, telling the justices that an FCC theory that companies facing penalties can eventually get a jury trial was "unsound."
-
February 25, 2026
IP Co. Investors Sue Over AI-Focused Acquisition Losses
Executives and directors of semiconductor technology company Synopsys Inc. were hit with a shareholder's derivative suit accusing them of misleading investors about the operational challenges faced by one of its segments following a $35 billion acquisition of an artificial intelligence company made in 2024.
-
February 25, 2026
Judge Skeptical Of Bid To Toss FTC's Zillow, Redfin Case
A Virginia federal judge seemed skeptical on Wednesday as Zillow Group Inc. and Redfin Corp. pushed their bid to toss the Federal Trade Commission's case over an alleged agreement between the real estate listing companies to not compete for rental ads.
-
February 25, 2026
'Conflicting' Claims Threaten Google ERISA Suit, Judge Hints
A Connecticut federal judge suggested Wednesday that a former Google sales representative may need to make changes if he wants to advance his lawsuit alleging the tech giant withheld $2 million in commission and improperly fired him amid colon cancer treatments, pointing to "competing allegations" in the complaint.
-
February 25, 2026
Fed. Circ. Denies Yet Another Petition Over PTAB Changes
The Federal Circuit on Wednesday rejected another company's challenge to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's practice of using settled expectations as a reason to deny patent reviews, leaving two petitions over the agency's new institution policies still pending.
Expert Analysis
-
How 2 Tech Statutes Are Being Applied To Agentic AI
The application of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act and the California Invasion of Privacy Act to agentic artificial intelligence is still developing, but recent case law, like Amazon's lawsuit against Perplexity in California federal court, provides some initial guidance for companies developing or deploying these technologies, say attorneys at Weil.
-
Defense Strategy Takeaways From Recent TCPA Class Actions
Although recent Telephone Consumer Protection Act decisions do not establish any bright-line tests for defeating predominance based on an argument that class members provided consent for the calls, certain trends have emerged that should inform defense strategies at class certification, say attorneys at Womble Bond.
-
NYC Bar Opinion Warns Attys On Use Of AI Recording Tools
Attorneys who use artificial intelligence tools to record, transcribe and summarize conversations with clients should heed the New York City Bar Association’s recent opinion addressing the legal and ethical risks posed by such tools, and follow several best practices to avoid violating the Rules of Professional Conduct, say attorneys at Smith Gambrell.
-
Series
The Biz Court Digest: Dispatches From Utah's Newest Court
While a robust body of law hasn't yet developed since the Utah Business and Chancery Court's founding in October 2024, the number of cases filed there has recently picked up, and its existence illustrates Utah's desire to be top of mind for businesses across the country, says Evan Strassberg at Michael Best.
-
Aerospace And Defense Law: Trends To Follow In 2026
Some of the key 2026 developments to watch in aerospace and defense contracting law stem from provisions of this year's National Defense Authorization Act, a push to reform procurement, executive orders that announced Trump administration priorities, the upcoming Artemis space mission and continuing efforts to deploy artificial intelligence, say attorneys at Thompson Hine.
-
Viewing The Merger Landscape Through An HPE-Juniper Lens
If considerations beyond antitrust law were taken into account to determine whether Section 7 of the Clayton Act was violated in the Hewlett Packard Enterprise-Juniper Networks deal, then legal practitioners advocating deal clearance may now have to argue that deals should be justified by considerations not set forth in the merger guidelines, says Matthew Cantor of Shinder Cantor.
-
4 Quick Emotional Resets For Lawyers With Conflict Fatigue
Though the emotional wear and tear of legal work can trap attorneys in conflict fatigue — leaving them unable to shake off tense interactions or return to a calm baseline — simple therapeutic techniques for resetting the nervous system can help break the cycle, says Chantel Cohen at CWC Coaching & Therapy.
-
Privacy Ruling Shows How CIPA Conflicts With Modern Tech
A California federal court's recent holding in Doe v. Eating Recovery Center that Meta is not liable for reading, or attempting to read, the pixel-related transmission while in transit reflects a mismatch between the California Invasion of Privacy Act's 1967 origins and modern encrypted, browser‑driven communications, says David Wheeler at Neal Gerber.
-
Patent Eligibility Faces Widening Gap Between USPTO, Courts
The year 2026 opened with a profoundly altered Patent Act Section 101 ecosystem — the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has pushed eligibility as far open as it can for artificial intelligence technologies, but the courts are not on the same page, say attorneys at Skadden.
-
AI Licensing Suit Exhibits Pitfalls Of Vague Contract Terms
Fastcase Inc. v. Alexi Technologies, a case in District of Columbia federal court, demonstrates the potential consequences of vaguely drafted contract terms amid unforeseen technological advances, but there is practical guidance parties may employ to mitigate the potential for similar contract disputes, say attorneys at Baker Botts.
-
Series
Playing Tennis Makes Me A Better Lawyer
An instinct to turn pain into purpose meant frequent trips to the tennis court, where learning to move ahead one point at a time was a lesson that also applied to the steep learning curve of patent prosecution law, says Daniel Henry at Marshall Gerstein.
-
How Generative AI Cos. Can Navigate Product Liability Claims
Increasingly, plaintiffs are aggregating disputes over generative artificial intelligence and pursuing them through mass-tort-style proceedings, borrowing tactics from litigation involving social media, pharmaceuticals and other consumer-facing products — but there are approaches that AI companies can use to narrow claims and manage long-term exposure, say attorneys at Arnold & Porter.
-
Expect Major Shifts In Patent And Trademark Policy This Year
New leadership and initiatives promise to bring consequential changes to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's practices in 2026, likely favoring patent allowance and issuance, as well as streamlining trademark processes, say attorneys at Knobbe Martens.
-
How FERC Is Shaping The Future Of Data Center Grid Use
Two recent orders from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission affecting the PJM Interconnection and Southwest Power Pool regions offer the first glimpse into how FERC will address the challenges of balancing resource adequacy, grid reliability and fair cost allocation for expansions to accommodate artificial intelligence-driven data centers, say attorneys at Husch Blackwell.
-
What To Expect From Justices' 401(k) Ruling, DOL Rulemaking
The U.S. Supreme Court's upcoming ruling in Anderson v. Intel, addressing alternative assets in defined contribution plans, coupled with the U.S. Department of Labor's recently proposed regulation on fiduciary duties in selecting alternative investments, could alleviate the litigation risk that has impeded wider consideration of such investments, say attorneys at Ropes & Gray.