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Court Watch Image

Court Watch

Cynthia M. Klaus & Bryan Huntington

Franchisees and Dealers Should Plead Causation In Actions Against the Government <br>Michigan Court Transfers Case Brought By 41 Franchisees to Franchisor's Home State

Features

Managing Security Risks During Labor Disputes Image

Managing Security Risks During Labor Disputes

Peter Martin

Every company with union workers faces the risk of a labor dispute. Identifying any business risks and then managing them is a priority for executive decision-makers who must ensure that the company delivers its promises to stockholders, customers and employees. The process is well defined in business terms:

Features

Ninth Circuit Says Fair Use Must Be Considered In DMCA Takedowns Image

Ninth Circuit Says Fair Use Must Be Considered In DMCA Takedowns

Scott Graham

Copyright holders must take into account fair use defenses before demanding that services such as YouTube take down unauthorized content, the Ninth Circuit ruled last month.

Features

Reviewing the CFAA Image

Reviewing the CFAA

Stephen M. Kramarsky

Locks, the saying goes, keep honest people honest. But no lock is perfect and the determined thief will always find a way in. In recent years, it has become obvious that the same is true of the Internet.

Features

Peering Into Copyright Office's Report on Orphan Works Image

Peering Into Copyright Office's Report on Orphan Works

David M. Kohane & David S. Gold

What happens when a party wants to use a photograph, image, writing or other work that may be subject to copyright protection, but cannot identify or locate the original author to secure permission? The dilemma these "orphan works" poses was the subject of a recent 106-page report by the U.S. Copyright Office. The report has left the creative world abuzz and, in many cases, aghast at the implications of proposed legislation some believe would effectively overhaul the U.S. Copyright Act.

Features

Quarterly State Compliance Review Image

Quarterly State Compliance Review

Sandra Feldman

This edition of the Quarterly State Compliance Review looks at some legislation of interest to corporate lawyers that went into effect between Aug. 1 and Oct. 1, 2015, including amendments to Delaware's corporation and LLC laws. It also looks at some recent cases of interest, including two decisions from Delaware's Chancery Court.

Features

NLRB Changes Rules for Determining Joint Employers Image

NLRB Changes Rules for Determining Joint Employers

Charles G. Miller

The long-awaited decision of the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) in <i>Browning-Ferris Industries of California</i> set forth new guidelines under which a company could be determined to be a joint employer so that it would be subject to collective bargaining.

Features

2015 Trends: Balancing Judicial vs. Corporate e-Discovery Practices Image

2015 Trends: Balancing Judicial vs. Corporate e-Discovery Practices

Bill Piwonka

The changing data landscape and prevalence of new data sources continues to impact how e-discovery is addressed. I had the opportunity to discuss these impacts with Andrea D'Ambra, senior counsel for Norton Rose Fulbright, as part of a recent webcast. We compared and contrasted findings from Norton Rose Fulbright's Litigation Trends Annual Survey of in-house counsel and Exterro's 2015 Federal Judges' Survey. Following are the takeaways we discussed.

Features

<i>Ariosa Diagnostics v. Sequenom </i> Image

<i>Ariosa Diagnostics v. Sequenom </i>

David L. Walker & Angela L. Morrison

On June 12, 2015, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, in <i>Ariosa Diagnostics,</i> affirmed a grant of summary judgment of invalidity of another patent in the biotech space. The decision adds to a long and growing list of patents that have fallen in the wake of the Supreme Court's recent 35 U.S.C. '101 jurisprudence.

Features

<b><i>Online Extra</b></i> Ninth Circuit Rejects Pay for Student-Athletes Image

<b><i>Online Extra</b></i> Ninth Circuit Rejects Pay for Student-Athletes

Marisa Kendall

Colleges can't be required to let star athletes cash in on their celebrity status, a Ninth Circuit panel ruled on Sept. 30, reversing part of a landmark antitrust decision that had called into question the NCAA's entire business model.

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