Sotomayor's Dissent Fire: AI Law's Next Battleground
Justice Sonia Sotomayor just laid bare the Supreme Court's fractures — and it's a stark warning for AI's regulatory wars. Dissenting endlessly, she's not bridging divides.
Justice Sonia Sotomayor just laid bare the Supreme Court's fractures — and it's a stark warning for AI's regulatory wars. Dissenting endlessly, she's not bridging divides.
While the Supreme Court wrestles with AI regs and privacy battles, their pets offer a reminder: these are regular folks with slobbery dogs and rogue goats. But does it change how they rule?
Steve Bannon's four-month prison stint for defying Congress? It might soon vanish. The Supreme Court just teed up the DOJ's motion to dismiss.
That newborn in the ER, mom undocumented—is she a citizen forever? Oral arguments say no, the 14th Amendment bends like gun rights did for AR-15s.
Remote work exploded, but GDPR didn't budge. One overlooked policy update could save your company from seven-figure fines.
Picture this: you're a lawyer staring down a thorny contract dispute, and your shiny legal AI coach just recycles the same checklist. Trust vanishes. New research flips the script on what builds real confidence in these tools.
A single Federal Circuit ruling just made life hell for owners of subcomponent patents. MRI's 'constricted convection' tech had killer evidence—yet it wasn't enough.
Just when free access to laws seemed settled, the Pro Codes Act storms back into the Senate. This bipartisan push to shield copyrights on safety codes could rewrite how we build — and who pays for it.
Picture this: two patents for a clever cable rail barrier, dead on arrival because one inventor's name got left off. The Federal Circuit just made it crystal clear—no shortcuts on inventorship.
Law students aren't just studying rights—they're fighting to keep the enforcers of erosion off campus. Temple's bold proposal signals a campus revolt against ICE ties.
Imagine inventing the next big thing, only for giants to swipe it free. Patent monetization has tanked 60% since 2010 — but AI's crashing the party as the ultimate fixer.
Everyone figured it'd be the 25th Amendment or bust for sidelining Trump. But his fiercest critic's lawyer just dropped a wilder playbook: fake a health scare, let Vance run the show.
Common Paper just weaponized contract negotiation with a 10X faster AI engine and a partnership that signals where legal tech is actually headed. The question isn't whether it works—it's whether this alliance model becomes the industry standard.
Uber just made a jaw-dropping move: expanding its AWS contract to run more workloads on Amazon's homemade AI chips, just two years after pledging allegiance to Oracle and Google. This isn't about chip performance—it's about something far messier.
The feds aren't fighting Anthropic in court anymore. They're rewriting the rulebook to make sure no AI company can refuse government requests again—and it could hollow out the safety guardrails that protect us all.
Brussels drops its voluntary playbook for taming GPAI under the EU AI Act. But after 20 years watching Valley hype, I'm asking: does this actually stick, or is it more paperwork for the lawyers?
Your Ring camera isn't just watching burglars anymore. It's eyeing grandma's falls, your Airbnb guests' noise, and restaurant lines—thanks to a fresh app store dripping with AI promises and privacy red flags.
Matt Pollins just unleashed a directory of AI-native law firms. Twenty-seven NewMods already — and counting. Big Law's wake-up call has arrived.
Seventy-nine percent. That's how many Americans say Congress must hold feds accountable for ignoring privacy laws. CDT's new coalition push could finally force a reckoning.
If you're an SME boss in Europe staring down the EU AI Act, this new list of AI literacy programs promises a lifeline. But after 20 years watching tech hype cycles, I'm asking: does it deliver, or just line trainers' pockets?