Features
DOL's New Proposed FMLA Regulations: They Help Employers, But Is It Enough?
Since the Department of Labor's regulations implementing the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993 were first issued in 1995, they have caused a degree of consternation for employers navigating some of their more confusing aspects, and grappling with employee abuse. In an effort to add clarity, the DOL published new proposed changes to the regulations on Feb. 11, 2008. The proposed regulations clarify some uncertainties, but many remain.
Features
The Broken Covenant: A Retrospective -- 'Partners for Life'?
This article examines the "Partners for Life" covenant and several of the factors that led to its demise.
Features
How to Prepare for a Live Presentation
Delivering a live presentation with impact demands a particular type of preparation, whether you are addressing a room of hundreds or a client's small executive team. This article provides advice on how to craft such presentations.
Features
Bringing Lateral Attorneys on Board: A Blueprint for Success
The lateral movement of attorneys between firms requires a well-defined and well-executed management program in order to maximize the benefits of the move to both sides. This article sets forth the key elements, all of which must be addressed in order to maximize the investment a law firm makes in the lateral and in order to achieve career satisfaction and retention of lateral attorneys.
Features
Business Method Patents and State Street: Federal Circuit to Hear Supplemental Briefing
On its own initiative in a pending appeal, the Federal Circuit has ordered supplemental briefing concerning the patentability of process claims and the Federal Circuit's 1998 decision in <i>State Street Bank & Trust Co. v. Signature Financial Group, Inc.</i>, which eliminated the 'business method exception' to patentable subject matter.
e-Commerce Docket Sheet
Registered Trademark Owner's Remedies Not Limited By Types of Goods<br>Domain Name with 'e' before Famous Mark Is Dilution<br>Failure to Produce Written Copyright Transfer Does Not Prevent Standing<br>Electing Statutory Damages For Counterfeit Mark Use Precludes Some Fees
Features
Federal Circuit Split Decision on 'Public Accessibility' of Internet Posting
Do Internet postings constitute 'printed publications' that are available as prior art under 35 U.S.C. §102(b)? Most practitioners and examiners behave as though this were a settled question. It is not. The Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit recently addressed this issue in <i>SRI International v. Internet Security Systems and Symantec</i>,. After much discussion of the principle of 'public accessibility,' the majority of the panel determined that there was a genuine issue of material fact as to whether a paper that SRI posted on its Internet server was a printed publication.
Features
Sponsored Linking Can Ruffle Feathers
In <i>Boston Duck Tours, LP v. Super Duck Tours, LLC</i>, the District Court of Massachusetts ruled that sponsored linking qualifies as 'use in commerce' for purposes of trademark infringement under the Lanham Act. Although the court ultimately found no likely consumer confusion in this case, in holding that sponsored linking falls within the purview of the Lanham Act, the court joins a growing number of circuits and districts that have failed to take a cue from well-settled, and clearly analogous, offline-trademark principles. Rather, these courts seem inexplicably intent on reinventing the wheel and expanding the scope of Lanham Act protection to include Web-based activities that are virtually imperceptible to consumers.
Features
Obtaining Testimony and Evidence from Overseas Witnesses
Will you be able to secure evidence that could clear your client when it is located outside the reach of U.S. courts? It's a salient question for today's e-commerce counsel. The defense of white-collar crime increasingly involves the need to obtain evidence from witnesses located abroad. Without careful planning, exculpatory evidence may remain beyond the reach of a defendant for whom such evidence is the only thing standing between him or her, and a prison sentence.
Divided and Conquered? The Precarious Standing of Patent Licensees
This article examines three Federal Circuit rulings that have set important new guidelines for which kinds of licensees will have independent standing to sue infringers, which will be compelled to join their patentees, and which will be left out in the cold.
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