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LJN Newsletters

  • Clients have been telling lawyers for years how to make the relationships work; what we are looking for and how to win business. Are they listening? Most of us don't think so." Here's what to do.

    July 30, 2012Silvia Coulter
  • Cross-border equipment lessors and their financiers often prefer binding arbitration clauses in their lease agreements on the assumption that, under the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, an arbitral award granted, for example, in the United States would be simple and quick to enforce in the foreign jurisdiction of the lessee. This, however, is not necessarily the case.

    July 30, 2012James R. Cairns
  • A proposed law to combat digital piracy stalled last year in the face of widespread public opposition, but district courts are embracing its controversial remedies against Internet companies that do business with alleged infringers in trademark cases.

    July 30, 2012Sheri Qualters
  • With the explosion of social media one challenge is that much of the information posted in such venues is dross. But there are also the occasional invaluable kernels ' needles in the cyber haystack, as it were ' that provide opportunities for expanding your portfolio of work with existing or new clients.

    July 30, 2012Mark Hinkle
  • Highlights of the latest intellectual property news from around the country.

    July 30, 2012Howard J. Shire and Joseph Mercadante
  • A recent federal court ruling, National Association of the Deaf v. Netflix, Inc., held that California's state disability rights laws applied to a website, despite the absence of a bricks-and-mortar store nexus. Instead, the National Association for the Deaf (NAD) pursued the accessibility under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) of a "website only" firm with no real-world presence ' Netflix.

    July 30, 2012Stanley P. Jaskiewicz
  • In In Re Bill of Lading Transmission and Processing System Patent Litigation, the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit held that Form 18 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure governs the required specificity when pleading direct patent infringement.

    July 30, 2012Brad Riel
  • While on the surface the Rosetta Stone opinion might seem to be a public rebuke of the merits of Google's AdWords program, on closer scrutiny it is clear that the Fourth Circuit's opinion is more properly read as a reprimand of the district court, which, according to the Fourth Circuit, improperly mixed its standards of review and made a hash of the functionality doctrine in the process.

    July 30, 2012Timothy Denny Greene