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Features

Taming the Beast

Laurie Fischer, Heather Yanak

Corporate law departments acknowledge the need to manage and control the unabated and explosive growth of digital information, yet understand that the traditional approach will not work.

Features

What's New in Word 2013: First Look

Sue Hughes

A guide to the new version of Word.

Columns & Departments

News Briefs

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Highlights of the latest franchising news from around the country.

Columns & Departments

Court Watch

Cynthia M. Klaus & Susan E. Tegt

Highlights of the latest franchising cases from around the country.

Language-Based Knowledge Extraction Can Reform Document Review

Bobbi Basile

An emerging market trend ' language-based knowledge extraction ' holds the promise of greater strategic insight, improved efficiencies and cost-saving advantages during document review. Knowledge extraction achieves the objective of identifying relevant documents and understanding what those documents actually say at the beginning of the review process as opposed to the end.

Counsel Concerns

Stan Soocher

Naming Non-Party Witness as Defendant Leads to Disqualification of Copyright Plaintiff's Counsel

Columns & Departments

Cameo Clips

Stan Soocher

Online Infringement/Class Action Issues<br>Trademark Infringement/Fictional Products<br>True-Life Depictions/In TV Programs

Depositions in Arbitration

Charles F. Forer

This is the second in an ongoing series of articles that provide franchise attorneys with practical advice about conducting arbitrations.

Online Extra: Effie Film LLC Loses Attorney Fees Bid After Winning Copyright Suit

Stan Soocher

The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York denied the Effie film production company's bid for attorney fees and costs in its declaratory action against author Eve Pomerance over the parties' scripts about relationships among three famous art-world figures.

Copyright Challenges In Use of Historical Facts for Productions

Michael I. Rudell, Neil J. Rosini

Historical facts are the essence of fictionalized 'true stories' as well as non-fiction historical accounts. But authors who dip into the bowl of history to prepare their own creative works must accept that facts are not protectible under copyright. This exclusion applies equally to the facts in a fictionalized or fictional narrative as well as to non-fiction history.

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