Technology

  • March 20, 2026

    UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London

    The past week in London has seen an ex-professional footballer revive a dispute with Charles Russell Speechlys, Virgin Media face a group data protection claim after hundreds of thousands of customers' personal details were exposed online for months, and Mishcon de Reya sued by a real estate private equity firm founded by a former Morgan Stanley executive.

  • March 20, 2026

    US, Japan Agree To Develop Critical Mineral Trade Plan

    The U.S. and Japan have committed to working together to develop trade policies related to protecting supply chains of critical minerals and their downstream industries, U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer announced.

  • March 20, 2026

    Covington Steers Ecolab On $4.75B Data Center Cooling Deal

    Ecolab said Friday it has agreed to acquire CoolIT Systems, a company focused on liquid cooling technology for artificial intelligence data centers, from private equity firm KKR for approximately $4.75 billion, with Covington & Burling LLP advising Ecolab on the deal. 

  • March 20, 2026

    AI Is Key To M&A, Retaining Clients, Tulane Speakers Say

    Artificial intelligence has rapidly become central to dealmaking, with company leadership and their lawyers facing growing pressure to understand the technology or risk losing deals and clients, attendees heard at the annual Tulane Corporate Law Institute.

  • March 19, 2026

    4th Circ. Backs T-Mobile In Signal Interference Suit

    The Federal Communications Act dooms every bit of an internet and phone service provider's suit accusing T-Mobile of interfering with and slowing down its signals, the Fourth Circuit said Thursday, declining to revive the litigation.

  • March 19, 2026

    Chan Zuckerberg Initiative Hit With Gender Bias Action

    The Chan Zuckerberg Initiative LLC run by Meta Platforms Inc. CEO Mark Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan discriminated against women by routinely paying them less than men and promoting them with less frequency, according to a proposed class and collective action removed Wednesday to California federal court.

  • March 19, 2026

    Meta Offers Special Portal For Crime Investigators, Jury Told

    Meta's head of child safety policy told a New Mexico jury Thursday about the dedicated website the company maintains for law enforcement to request records, which, if marked as emergency requests, can get a response from the company in an average of 67 minutes.

  • March 19, 2026

    5th Circ. Weighs Release Of Apple IP Agreements To Xiaomi

    A Fifth Circuit panel on Thursday asked why patent licensing agreements between Apple Inc. and Blackberry Corp. should be circulated beyond outside counsel of a Chinese rival to Apple involved in overseas litigation, questioning the parties on why they "can't live" with an exclusion preventing in-house counsel from seeing the records.

  • March 19, 2026

    Ex-Judges Say Anthropic Case Doesn't Merit Court Deference

    Nearly 150 former judges are backing Anthropic's fight against its designation as a "supply chain risk" by the U.S. Department of Defense, telling the D.C. Circuit in an amicus brief that the judiciary shouldn't simply defer to the executive just because it invokes national security.

  • March 19, 2026

    Oil Company Sues X Critic Over Assets Amid Investor Suit

    Oil and gas asset company Next Bridge Hydrocarbons Inc. claims that an X commenter has falsely accused the company of misleading investors about the value of its assets, in a dispute that comes as investors are appealing the dismissal of claims against the Texas company about misrepresentation of assets.

  • March 19, 2026

    Gemini Investor Sues Over Crypto Co.'s Post-IPO Biz Shift

    Crypto exchange operator Gemini Space Station Inc. and its founders Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss were hit with a proposed shareholder class action accusing them of not disclosing before the firm's initial public offering its plans to shift focus to the prediction market, pull back on global operations and replace certain members of its leadership.

  • March 19, 2026

    Anatomy Of A Citation Hallucination: AI Edit, Associate Review

    Counsel for consumers in a supplement labeling lawsuit against Amazon responded Wednesday to a Seattle federal judge's order to explain an AI-hallucinated citation, saying the error was introduced by a generative artificial intelligence tool used to "harmonize" drafts of a brief, then missed by a fifth-year Boies Schiller associate tasked with checking the citations.

  • March 19, 2026

    Nokia, Warner Bros. Seek To End Video-Coding Patent Suit

    Nokia and Warner Bros. on Thursday agreed to end a legal fight in Delaware federal court after the Hollywood studio earlier this month lost its bid to toss claims that it infringed a set of the Finnish company's video-coding patents.

  • March 19, 2026

    Senate Panel To Vote On Satellite Security Bills Next Week

    U.S. senators next week will consider sending to the floor two bills designed to beef up satellite security, one of which had already gained bipartisan backing in the U.S. House of Representatives during the last Congress.

  • March 19, 2026

    NHTSA Heightens Tesla Full Self-Driving Probe

    The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration on Thursday said that it was focusing its investigation into Tesla's advanced driver-assistance system on its ability to spot degrading road conditions after receiving more reports of crashes potentially linked to the technology.

  • March 19, 2026

    Del. Supreme Court Revives Payscale's Noncompete Suit

    The Delaware Supreme Court on Thursday revived Payscale Inc.'s lawsuit seeking to enforce an 18-month noncompete agreement and related restrictive covenants against a former sales executive, ruling that a lower court dismissed the case too early by improperly weighing facts and drawing inferences against the company.

  • March 19, 2026

    Judge Quashes Subpoena Of 5 Firms That Repped Twitter

    A Delaware federal court ruled Thursday that six former Twitter employees cannot subpoena five law firms that represented the social media company in connection with its acquisition by Elon Musk, rejecting the employees' "conclusory allegations" that the company and Musk used the firms to make false promises of severance benefits.

  • March 19, 2026

    Apple Watch Redesign Gets Early OK As Patent Loss Upheld

    The Federal Circuit on Thursday affirmed a U.S. International Trade Commission decision that found a previous version of the Apple Watch infringes two Masimo blood oxygen monitor patents, but the ruling came one day after an ITC judge said Apple's redesigned version does not infringe those patents.

  • March 19, 2026

    Squires Concludes That Foreign Gov'ts Can't File AIA Petitions

    U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Director John Squires said foreign governments cannot file patent challenges under the America Invents Act, providing the reasoning for his February rejection of a Chinese company's proceeding against an LG touch screen patent.

  • March 19, 2026

    Fintech Co. Says It Caught Rival Stealing Code 'Red-Handed'

    Financial technology company MyCard Inc. has filed a suit against rival Atomic FI Inc. in Delaware federal court alleging MyCard has uncovered direct evidence that the competitor copied proprietary software after planting a hidden "honeypot" string in MyCard's code.

  • March 19, 2026

    Drug Co. Can't Claim Most Docs Contain Trade Secrets At Trial

    A Manhattan federal judge ruled Thursday that a pharmaceutical consulting company won't be allowed to argue to a jury that thousands of documents it did not enter into evidence contain trade secrets amid an ongoing misappropriation trial.

  • March 19, 2026

    Protect 911 In Tech Transition, Public Interest Group Says

    A public interest group has urged the Federal Communications Commission to add more protections for 911 service to an upcoming rule paving the way for all-internet-based phone networks, though it still says the underlying rule is unwarranted.

  • March 19, 2026

    Still No Shenanigans: Fed. Circ. Keeps Review Bar High

    The Federal Circuit's rejection of all mandamus petitions asking it to rein in the way U.S. Patent and Trademark Office leadership is ​evaluating patent challenges cements the appeals court's near-impossible standard for reviewing institution decisions, attorneys say.

  • March 19, 2026

    Feds' Bid To Wipe Calif. Clean Car Regs Spells More Upheaval

    The Trump administration's assault on California's more than decade-old clean car regulations deliberately upends the U.S. auto industry's transition toward alternative-powered vehicles, spelling even more regulatory uncertainty as the antagonistic political climate and long legal battles persist, experts say.

  • March 19, 2026

    Meta Says IRS Defying Settled Facts In $16B Tax Fight

    The IRS is refusing to agree to the truth of parts of the trial transcript and the U.S. Tax Court's opinion last year in a Facebook transfer pricing case as the social media platform's parent, Meta, disputes a $16 billion tax bill in a related case, the company told the court.

Expert Analysis

  • Series

    Trail Running Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Navigating the muddy, root-filled path of trail marathons and ultramarathons provides fertile training ground for my high-stakes fractional general counsel work, teaching me to slow down my mind when the terrain shifts, sharpen my focus and trust my training, says Eric Proos at Next Era Legal.

  • Trade Secret Steps To Take As Exposure Risk Increases

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    Against the backdrop of rising trade secret litigation, greater employee mobility and constraints on noncompetes, recent cases highlight the importance of minimizing trade secret risks when employees leave or when new hires join, say attorneys at Sullivan & Cromwell.

  • What Artists Can Learn From Latest AI Music Licensing Deals

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    Recent partnerships between music labels and artificial intelligence companies raise a number of key questions for artists, rightsholders and other industry players about IP, revenue-sharing, and rights and obligations, say attorneys at Manatt.

  • Courts Are Reanchoring Antitrust Enforcement In Evidence

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    Recent U.S. antitrust disputes, including with Meta and HPE-Juniper, illustrate how judicial scrutiny combined with internal institutional checks is pushing enforcement toward an evidence-based footing and refinements, says Thomas Stratmann at George Mason University.

  • If Your AI Vendor Goes Bankrupt: Keeping Licensed IP Access

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    With contracting norms still evolving to account for the licensing of artificial intelligence tools, customers that need to retain access to key AI products in the event of vendor’s bankruptcy should consider four elements that could determine whether they may invoke traditional Section 365(n) intellectual property protections, say attorneys at Sidley.

  • AI Scientific Discovery Order Implications For Life Sciences

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    President Donald Trump's November executive order establishing a government effort to use artificial intelligence to accelerate scientific discovery has the potential to leverage significant federal resources and data to support research, drug and device approvals, and AI model training in the life sciences sector, say attorneys at Hogan Lovells.

  • Tips From Del. Decision Nixing Major Earnout Damages Award

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    The Delaware Supreme Court recently vacated in part the largest earnout-related damages award in Delaware history, making clear that the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing cannot be used to rescue parties from drafting choices where the relevant regulatory risk was foreseeable at signing, say attorneys at Sullivan & Cromwell.

  • USPTO's New Patentability Focus Helps Emerging Tech

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    The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's recent efforts to shift patentability criteria back toward traditional standards of novelty, obviousness and adequate disclosure should make it easier for emerging tech, including artificial intelligence, to obtain patents, says Bill Braunlin at Barclay Damon.

  • CFIUS Risk Lessons From Chips Biz Divestment Order

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    President Donald Trump's January executive order directing HieFo to unwind its 2024 acquisition of a semiconductor business with ties to China underscores that even modestly sized transactions can attract CFIUS interest if they could affect strategic areas prioritized by the U.S. government, say attorneys at Debevoise.

  • What Applicants Can Expect From Calif. Crypto License Law

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    With the July effective date for California's Digital Financial Assets Law fast approaching, now is a critical time for companies to prepare for licensure, application and coverage compliance ahead of this significant regulatory milestone that will reshape how digital asset businesses operate in California, say attorneys at MoFo.

  • Malpractice Claim Assignability Continues To Divide Courts

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    Recent decisions from courts across the country demonstrate how different jurisdictions balance competing policy interests in determining whether legal malpractice claims can be assigned, providing a framework to identify when and how to challenge any attempted assignment, says Christopher Blazejewski at Sherin & Lodgen.

  • Reviewing The Legal Landscape Of Social Media For Minors

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    States have initiated a wave of legislation regulating minors' access to and use of social media platforms, so it will be critical for social media companies to closely track the patchwork of state laws and pending legal challenges so they are prepared to pivot if necessary, say attorneys at Sidley.

  • Tips For Counsel As PE Eyes Data Center Facility Services

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    As private equity interest in specialized commercial facility services providers heightens, considerations for counsel and private equity investors run the gamut from contract transferability to facility compliance, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.

  • Opinion

    CFIUS Must Adapt To Current Foreign Investment Realities

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    To continue protecting the U.S.’ long-term strategic and economic interests, the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States should implement practical enhancements that leverage technology, expertise and clear communication, and enable it to keep pace with evolving demands, says attorney Sohan Dasgupta.

  • Texas AG Wields Consumer Protection Law Against Tech Cos.

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    Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has targeted technology companies using the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act, a broadly worded statute that gives the attorney general wide latitude to pursue claims beyond traditional consumer protection, creating unique litigation risks, say attorneys at Yetter Coleman.

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