Telecommunications

  • November 30, 2023

    Sprint Strikes $3.5M Deal In Retirees' Benefit Calculation Suit

    Three former Sprint Communications employees urged a Kansas federal court to sign off on a $3.5 million deal to end their proposed class action accusing the T-Mobile subsidiary of using outdated mortality benefits to calculate retirement pension payments.

  • November 29, 2023

    Google's Bid To Avoid Jury Verdict In Epic Antitrust Trial DOA

    A California federal judge on Wednesday said he plans to deny Google's bid for a directed verdict at the wrap of a monthlong antitrust trial brought by Epic Games over the tech giant's dominance in the Android app distribution market, saying, "I'm not taking this away from the jury."

  • November 29, 2023

    Traxcell Asks High Court To Review Atty Fee Fight

    Traxcell Technologies LLC has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to take up an appeal concerning attorney fees owed to Sprint and Verizon after the telecommunication companies beat its infringement suit, arguing that the alleged "exceptional" litigation conduct occurred before a final ruling.

  • November 29, 2023

    T-Mobile Reneged On $27M Order, Phone-Maker Claims

    A former Sprint subcontractor claims T-Mobile caused it $27 million in damages by canceling a purchase order for hundreds of thousands of mobile phones without payment.

  • November 29, 2023

    Eagles Games Can Still Fly Without Fox TV, FCC Told

    Several media industry luminaries are looking to debunk the idea that viewers would lose access to the NFL's Philadelphia Eagles games on Sundays if the Federal Communications Commission decides not to renew Fox's Philadelphia TV license over 2020 election falsehoods.

  • November 29, 2023

    Gov't Contracts Of The Month: Boeing Jets, Robots, IT Deals

    The federal government advanced a $2.5 billion plan to modernize the Indian Health Service's health records system, purchased $2.3 billion more of refueling tankers from Boeing, and is weighing adding robots to its $132 billion fast-paced construction of new nuclear submarines. Here are Law360's top government contracts for November 2023.

  • November 29, 2023

    Feds Sanction, Seize N. Korea-Linked Crypto Mixer

    Hours after the U.S. Department of the Treasury announced new sanctions Wednesday against Sinbad, a company that anonymizes virtual currency transactions, the site was down, following allegations that it laundered funds for North Korean hackers, drug trafficking and child sex abuse.

  • November 29, 2023

    TracFone Pays $23M Settlement In FCC Subsidy Probes

    Verizon subsidiary TracFone Wireless has agreed to settle with the Federal Communications Commission for more than $23 million over allegations that it violated rules for signing up consumers to FCC low-income subsidy programs.

  • November 29, 2023

    FCC Warns 7 Network Providers To Block Illegal Robocalling

    The Federal Communications Commission has cautioned seven so-called gateway providers to block junk calls after an industry watchdog reported an apparent flow of illegal robocall traffic on their networks.

  • November 29, 2023

    4th Circ. Remands Railway Eminent Domain Fight To Va.

    Norfolk Southern Railway Co. should never have been allowed to pull its eminent domain fight with Zayo Group over a lease to run fiber optic cables from before the Virginia State Corporation Commission and into federal court, the Fourth Circuit has ruled, sending the dispute back there.

  • November 28, 2023

    'This Is Solvable': Google, Epic Ordered To Midtrial Deal Talk

    A California federal judge on Tuesday ordered top decision-makers at Google and Epic Games to try a second time to reach a settlement in their Play Store antitrust case as the monthlong trial nears its end, saying the fight is "solvable" and comparing their hesitation to a kid eating broccoli.

  • November 28, 2023

    Show Jurors The Copyright Notice, Judge Says In Disney Row

    The Walt Disney Co. failed on Tuesday to persuade a California federal judge to stop former Microsoft executive Steve Perlman's digital effects company from potentially showing jurors next week what a team of lawyers from the Mouse House calls a "highly misleading" copyright notice.

  • November 28, 2023

    NetChoice Seeks Win In Suit Targeting Ark. Social Media Law

    Internet trade group NetChoice LLC is asking a federal judge to permanently block a challenged Arkansas law aimed at limiting minors' access to social media sites for being unconstitutionally vague and violating the First Amendment.

  • November 28, 2023

    FCC To Ease Signing-Up For Rural Health Funding Projects

    At its December meeting, the Federal Communications Commission intends to get the ball rolling on making it easier for rural health care providers to sign up for financial help from the U.S. government and to reduce bureaucratic hurdles in the process.

  • November 28, 2023

    Advocates Worry 988 Hotline Georouting Will Get Delayed

    Mental health advocates are concerned the Federal Communications Commission hasn't set a firm deadline for 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline providers to set up georouting to find the location of callers instead of relying only on area codes.

  • November 28, 2023

    Law Firm Leaders Cautiously Optimistic Heading Into 2024

    Major U.S. law firms are steadfast in their commitment to the pursuit of further growth despite ongoing economic uncertainty. Here’s what the leaders of four Leaderboard firms have to say about how the legal industry is preparing for next year.

  • November 28, 2023

    The 2023 Law360 Pulse Leaderboard

    Check out the Law360 Pulse Leaderboard to see which first-in-class firms made the list this year.

  • November 27, 2023

    Google's Android Monopoly Harms Users, Stanford Prof Says

    A Stanford economics professor took the stand Monday in Epic Games' antitrust suit over Google's Android app store, saying it holds a monopoly on the market for smartphone operating systems and uses anticompetitive tactics to stifle rivals, meaning smartphone users and developers "have suffered as a result."

  • November 27, 2023

    FCC Plans To Expand Data Breach Notification Rules

    Sixteen years after data breach notification rules were adopted for telecommunications companies and internet voice call providers, the Federal Communications Commission has plans to expand them.

  • November 27, 2023

    NTIA Says It's Working On Space Industry's Spectrum Needs

    A U.S. Commerce Department branch told the Federal Communications Commission it is working to identify the space industry's spectrum needs as the FCC looks to assist NASA and other federal agencies' efforts to boost in-space assembly and manufacturing services.

  • November 27, 2023

    Judge In Del. Asks DOJ To Look Into IP Edge Patent Litigation

    The top federal judge in Delaware concluded Monday that the Texas attorneys behind prolific patent litigation funding outfit IP Edge might have broken the law — and their ethical obligations as lawyers — by litigating ferociously for settlements from tech companies while operating behind a shadowy network of "relatively unsophisticated individuals."

  • November 27, 2023

    News Outlets Push To Toss Anti-Vax Antitrust Suit Now In DC

    The Associated Press, The Washington Post, Reuters and BBC told a D.C. federal court that the recent transfer of a lawsuit by Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s anti-vaccine group doesn't help its claims that the news organizations colluded with social media platforms to censor rivals.

  • November 27, 2023

    Amicus Groups Tell High Court To End Chevron Deference

    Six groups, including the Ohio Chamber of Commerce and several former state supreme court judges, filed friend-of-the-court briefs on Monday urging the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn a decades-old legal doctrine stating that courts must defer to federal agencies' interpretation of ambiguous laws.

  • November 27, 2023

    Elliott Slams Crown Castle For 'Profound Lack Of Oversight'

    Activist investor Elliott Investment Management LP on Monday took a jab at telecommunications company Crown Castle Inc., saying the company suffers from a "profound lack of oversight" and a "breathtaking magnitude" of underperformance, and calling for an executive shake-up if the company does not make significant changes.

  • November 27, 2023

    Twitter Plaintiff Can't Point To Specific Privacy Promises

    A Washington federal judge has tossed a Twitter user's proposed class action accusing the social media giant of deceptively obtaining his phone number for targeted advertising, ruling the user failed to identify what specific privacy assurance the site made that led him to provide the contact information.  

Expert Analysis

  • Safe-Harbor Period Change Could Hinder TCPA Compliance

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    A proposed rule change under consideration by the Federal Communications Commission would require businesses to honor do-not-call requests within 24 hours of receipt for calls and texts that are subject to the Telephone Consumer Protection Act, and companies have already called it unreasonable, say Aaron Weiss and Danny Enjamio at Carlton Fields.

  • Cos. Must Address Growing Chatbot Class Action Risk

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    Following a new wave of chatbot-related consumer data privacy litigation and expanding compliance obligations created by state legislatures, businesses using such technology face a high-risk environment for wiretapping allegations, with inconsistent court rulings to date and uncertain legal holdings ahead, say attorneys at Pierce Atwood.

  • Attorneys, Law Schools Must Adapt To New Era Of Evidence

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    Technological advancements mean more direct evidence is being created than ever before, and attorneys as well as law schools must modify their methods to account for new challenges in how this evidence is collected and used to try cases, says Reuben Guttman at Guttman Buschner.

  • 5 Telecom Issues To Watch Amid FCC Broadband Proposal

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    The Federal Communications Commission's recent proposal to restore net neutrality rules and reassert its regulatory authority over broadband providers is likely to spark debate over certain issues, including privacy rules and questions surrounding the commission's legal authority, says Matthew DelNero at Covington.

  • Series

    ESG Around The World: The UK

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    Following Brexit, the U.K. has adopted a different approach to regulating environmental, social and governance factors from the European Union — an approach that focuses on climate disclosures by U.K.-regulated entities, while steering clear of the more ambitious objectives pursued by the EU, say attorneys at Dechert.

  • Tips For Litigating Against Pro Se Parties In Complex Disputes

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    Litigating against self-represented parties in complex cases can pose unique challenges for attorneys, but for the most part, it requires the same skills that are useful in other cases — from documenting everything to understanding one’s ethical duties, says Bryan Ketroser at Alto Litigation.

  • Opinion

    Test Results Signal Poor Odds For Lead Cables Litigation

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    After sites in New York and New Jersey allegedly contaminated with lead by telecommunications cables were found by state and federal agencies to present no imminent threats to public health, it seems unlikely that mass litigation over this issue by plaintiffs firms or state attorneys general will succeed, says Andrew Ketterer at Ketterer & Ketterer.

  • Opinion

    Justices Should Nix Section 230 Immunity For Tech

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    The U.S. Supreme Court recently agreed to decide two new cases that present another opening to curtail the broad immunity enjoyed by tech company-owned social media platforms under Section 230, and it's long past time for online publishers to be treated the same as traditional ones, says Douglas Mirell at Greenberg Glusker.

  • To Comply With Campaign Finance Rules, Watch The Calendar

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    Corporations, campaigns and community advocates alike can all stay on the right side of federal campaign finance law during the 2024 election season by committing to observe the many overlapping dates and compliance windows that limit third-party coordination with candidates and electioneering communications, say attorneys at Wiley.

  • Unpacking The FAR Council's Cybersecurity Rules Proposal

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    New reporting and information sharing requirements in the Federal Acquisition Regulatory Council's recently proposed cybersecurity regulations would create new False Claims Act enforceability risks, and could be a focus for the U.S. Department of Justice's Civil Cyber Fraud Initiative, say Townsend Bourne and Lillia Damalouji at Sheppard Mullin.

  • Class Action Defense: Don't Give Up On Bristol-Myers Squibb

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    Federal appellate court decisions in the six years since the U.S. Supreme Court decided Bristol-Myers Squibb show that it's anyone's ballgame in class action jurisdictional arguments, so defendants are encouraged to consider carefully whether, where and when arguing lack of specific personal jurisdiction may be advantageous, say attorneys at K&L Gates.

  • Pro Bono Work Is Powerful Self-Help For Attorneys

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    Oct. 22-28 is Pro Bono Week, serving as a useful reminder that offering free legal help to the public can help attorneys expand their legal toolbox, forge community relationships and create human connections, despite the challenges of this kind of work, says Orlando Lopez at Culhane Meadows.

  • Diamond Sports Cases Shed Light On Executory Contracts

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    Recent Texas bankruptcy cases involving telecast fees payable by Diamond Sports to certain Major League Baseball teams provide a window into the dynamic relationship that can develop between debtors and counterparties under some executory contracts, say Joseph Badtke-Berkow and Robin Spigel at Allen & Overy.

  • What To Watch As The FCC Leans Into National Security

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    Information and communications technology and services operators and investors should keep a close eye on the Federal Communications Commission's increasing activity in national security matters, which could slow transactions and subject providers to additional oversight, say David Plotinsky and Patricia Cave at Morgan Lewis.

  • Series

    Playing In A Rock Cover Band Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Performing in a classic rock cover band has driven me to hone several skills — including focus, organization and networking — that have benefited my professional development, demonstrating that taking time to follow your muse outside of work can be a boon to your career, says Michael Gambro at Cadwalader.

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