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Features

Defamation Lawsuit Over Peacock Docuseries Reinstated on Appeal Image

Defamation Lawsuit Over Peacock Docuseries Reinstated on Appeal

Annie Mayne

Florida’s Fourth District Court of Appeal revived a defamation lawsuit of a Palm Beach County woman after finding the trial judge had improperly dismissed her case, which accuses a Peacock TV docuseries of falsely depicting her as the “madam” of a prostitution ring, among other crimes.

Features

Structuring Litigation Funding Agreements Image

Structuring Litigation Funding Agreements

Andrew C. Kassner & Joseph N. Argentina Jr.

Litigation funding, has become a sophisticated big business. These funders expect substantial return for funding litigation costs up front and taking on the risk of low or no recovery. But how should such agreements be structured?

Features

Insights Learned from High-Stakes Commercial Insurance Recovery Matters Image

Insights Learned from High-Stakes Commercial Insurance Recovery Matters

Anthony B. Crawford & Arnold Mascali

Commercial insurance policyholders require nuanced approaches to protect their assets both before and after suffering a loss due to catastrophic weather. With loss severity and increased frequency of catastrophic events being a stark reality, businesses must take a closer look at all the ways they can safeguard their rights.

Features

Disney-OpenAI’s Sora Deal: What it Signals for Licensing and Responsible AI Image

Disney-OpenAI’s Sora Deal: What it Signals for Licensing and Responsible AI

Reber “Mitch” Boult & Joshua Rojas

The Walt Disney Co.’s newly announced, three-year licensing agreement with OpenAI to bring more than 200 characters from Disney, Marvel, Pixar and Star Wars to Sora marks a pivotal moment at the intersection of intellectual property and generative AI. For rights holders, platforms, and brands, the deal illustrates an emerging blueprint for commercializing iconic IP in AI-native formats while attempting to manage legal, regulatory, and reputational risk.

Features

The Go-to-Market Plan Is a Powerful Tool to Add to 2026 Bus Dev Plans Image

The Go-to-Market Plan Is a Powerful Tool to Add to 2026 Bus Dev Plans

Meg Pritchard

Forward-looking firms have added a powerful tool to their strategic planning: the go-to-market (GTM) plan. For law firms, a GTM plan helps align lawyers, marketing and business development professionals, and firm leaders around clear objectives, research-informed opportunities and measurable outcomes.

Features

What’s Behind All the Recent Law Firm Mergers? Image

What’s Behind All the Recent Law Firm Mergers?

Paul Hodkinson

After decades of relatively muted activity, the legal industry has witnessed three major law firm mergers in the space of a single month. So what is going on?

Features

NYC Landlords Can’t Serve Commercial Tenants Using ‘More Relaxed Service Methods,’ Court Rules Image

NYC Landlords Can’t Serve Commercial Tenants Using ‘More Relaxed Service Methods,’ Court Rules

Alyssa Aquino

A New York City court ruled that landlords don’t have a process under the Real Property Actions and Proceedings Law to serve certain commercial tenants with the 14-day rent demands needed to begin repossessing a property.

Features

When Courts Push Back: The New e-Discovery Proportionality Standard for Mobile Data Image

When Courts Push Back: The New e-Discovery Proportionality Standard for Mobile Data

Michael D’Angelo

Mobile discovery has reached an inflection point. Courts spent 2024 handing out sanctions for two opposite failures: failing to preserve mobile data and collecting far too much of it. Litigants now face a genuine discovery double bind, including being punished for being careless and being punished again for being overly aggressive. That push-pull (collect more vs. collect less) is shaping the 2025 e-discovery landscape more than any technical development or new tool.

Columns & Departments

Landlord & Tenant Law Image

Landlord & Tenant Law

New York Real Estate Law Reporter Staff

Constructive Eviction Defense Precludes Summary Judgment on Ejectment Claim

Features

Federal Circuit Reasserts Limits On USPTO Authority In 'KAHWA' Ruling Image

Federal Circuit Reasserts Limits On USPTO Authority In 'KAHWA' Ruling

Andriy Lytvyn

The decision reasserts important limits on the USPTO’s authority, particularly its reliance on unverified foreign-language translations, hypothetical assumptions about what businesses “might” offer in the future, and tenuous connections between a word and a service category.

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