Trade Secret Law: Unjust Enrichment Now a Plaintiff's Secret Weapon
The game has shifted for trade secret plaintiffs. No longer are they locked into a single damages path if licensing discussions falter.
In-depth coverage of the latest AI Lawsuits developments, trends, and analysis — curated daily.
The game has shifted for trade secret plaintiffs. No longer are they locked into a single damages path if licensing discussions falter.
The First Amendment, a bedrock of free expression, is facing a provocative new interpretation: a 'money printer.' This framing sparks debate over its commercial implications.
The Supreme Court witnessed something truly novel: 'SCOTUSgami.' This unprecedented event signals a potential shift in how legal arguments are presented.
Howard Bashman's How Appealing blog delivers its weekly dose of critical appellate litigation news. Dive into hate speech law debates, death penalty nuances, and IRS audit complexities.
Google's official appeal of its search monopoly ruling is in, and the company is leaning hard on the 'we won fair and square' defense. This tech veteran isn't buying the clean hands narrative.
The Supreme Court just threw a curveball, deciding not to decide a critical death-row IQ dispute. This leaves a federal appeals court ruling standing, meaning Alabama can't execute Joseph Smith.
The Supreme Court has delivered a blow to cruise lines, potentially opening the door for Havana Docks to collect hundreds of millions for confiscated Cuban port assets. Justice Thomas penned a victory for U.S. nationals seeking damages under a decades-old law.
The digital battlefield is heating up as Access Now, with allies, urges a federal court to shield encryption from the intrusive grasp of NSO's infamous Pegasus spyware. This isn't just about one lawsuit; it's a seismic battle for the very foundation of our digital privacy.
Another day, another Biglaw scandal. This time it's insider trading, and guess who's at the center of it? The client.
We all thought the Supreme Court was a dispute-resolution machine, fixing broken legal consensus. But a closer look at their immigration docket this term tells a wilder story. It seems the justices are picking cases for reasons beyond mere judicial bickering.
Forget incremental upgrades; we're talking about AI building entire worlds and potentially resurrecting species. But what's real and what's just dazzling PR?
The perpetual dance between patent holders and alleged infringers just got a new twist. A recent judicial decision muddies the waters on whether patent trolls can actually get injunctions, and frankly, it's about time someone took a hard look at the money behind it all.