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Features

Creating a Successful Summer Associate Training Program Image

Creating a Successful Summer Associate Training Program

Jacqueline G. Meyer

It's not a secret that a strong summer associate program is essential to attracting and retaining talent. Aside from providing good work assignments and networking opportunities, a summer program would not be complete without a training component. Whether your firm provides a few seminars or a formal Summer Associate Academy complete with workshops, guest speakers, and opportunities to attend off-site conferences, the following provides an overview of some easy steps for creating an effective summer associate training program.

Features

Family Responsibilities Discrimination in Law Firms Image

Family Responsibilities Discrimination in Law Firms

Cara E. Greene & Christopher Willett

Sex-based stereotypes still play a role in workplace decisions in what has become one of the fastest growing areas of employment discrimination law: Family Responsibilities Discrimination ('FRD'). While overall the filing of employment discrimination cases has declined in recent years, FRD lawsuits have increased by 400% in the last decade; and FRD cases have a 50% success rate, compared with a 20% success rate for other employment discrimination cases.

Features

IP News Image

IP News

Compiled by Matthew Berkowitz & Natasha Sardesai

Recent developments you need to know.

Lulu v. Hulu: What's All of the Hullabaloo? Image

Lulu v. Hulu: What's All of the Hullabaloo?

Lauren Sullins Ralls

While the rhyming nature of these two Web sites provided entertaining fodder for journalists and bloggers, in <i>Lulu Enterprises, Inc. v. N-F Newsite, LLC, aka Hulu, LLC, et. al</i>, the court focused its denial of Plaintiff Lulu's motion for preliminary injunction not on the rhyming nature of the domain names, but upon the Plaintiff's inability to prove imminent harm from the launch of Defendant's 'hulu.com' Web site. Rather than focusing on a likelihood of confusion analysis, the court's decision instead contains useful commentary on the effects of statements made in federal registration applications, and the likely expansion of the use of the mark, as they relate to the 'imminent harm' standard in trademark and unfair competition cases.

How Not to Draft a Patent Application Image

How Not to Draft a Patent Application

Raymond Russell

Patent drafters must often write a patent application based on minimal disclosure. Some practitioners take pride in their ability to do so. However, several recent landmark court cases have substantially increased the risk that a patent drafted in this manner will be unenforceable.

Twice the Remedy? Dual Recovery in Copyright and Trademark Law Image

Twice the Remedy? Dual Recovery in Copyright and Trademark Law

Mary Mathew & R. Michael Cestaro

In another Ninth Circuit case involving Microsoft Corporation, a district court ruled last fall that a software company is entitled to recover statutory damages under both the Copyright and Lanham Acts against those who sell and distribute counterfeit software, where the software maker suffers distinct injuries to different interests as a result of the infringement. <i>Microsoft v. Evans</i>. This Eastern District of California decision reflects what may be a growing trend regarding the issue of awarding statutory damages under both copyright and trademark law for a single act that violates aspects of both statutes.

Case Briefs Image

Case Briefs

Laura A. Foggan & Benjamin J. Theisman

Alaska Supreme Court Enforces Pollution Exclusion

Supreme Court Ruling in Integrity Is 'Absolute' for Reinsurers Image

Supreme Court Ruling in Integrity Is 'Absolute' for Reinsurers

Dennis M. Reznick & Peter M. Dunne

In a ruling that affects both insurance and reinsurance companies as well as policy-holders of insolvent insurers subject to the New Jersey's Insurer Liquidation Act, the New Jersey Supreme Court, in a 3-2 decision in a case of first impression, definitively excluded contingent claims that are 'incurred but not reported' from sharing in the distribution of assets of an insolvent insurer.

Features

Bi-Economy and Panasia: A Differing View Image

Bi-Economy and Panasia: A Differing View

Lynn K. Neuner & Christopher Lucht

Policyholder counsel have heralded the recent New York Court of Appeals' decisions in <i>Bi-Economy</i> and <i>Panasia</i> as victories for insureds due to the court's recognition, in certain circumstances, of claims for consequential damages beyond the limits of an insurance policy. However, a close reading of the majority opinions in these cases demonstrates that the Court of Appeals has taken only a tentative step in the direction of allowing claims under New York law for damages beyond policy limits. Based on the analytical construct used by the court to address the policyholders' claims in these cases, insurers have several avenues to challenge the application of these holdings to future cases and may ultimately limit these decisions to the specific facts under which they were decided.

Notice-of-Circumstances Provisions in Claims-Made Policies Image

Notice-of-Circumstances Provisions in Claims-Made Policies

Victor F. Mustelier

As insurers under D&amp;O policies respond to the claims activity likely to be generated by the subprime mortgage crisis, they should consider whether their policyholders are complying with notice provisions commonly found in 'claims-made' policies dealing with notice of potential claims and the submission of claims outside of the current policy period. This easily overlooked issue has potentially serious consequences for an insurer ' affecting the scope of its coverage obligations and the exposure of its limits. In coverage litigation, courts have often found that policyholders who fail to comply with these 'notice-of-circumstances' clauses are not entitled to coverage.

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