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Telecommunications
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November 09, 2023
Google In-House Attys Joked About 'Fake Privilege,' Jury Told
Two in-house Google lawyers communicating on an internal company chat joked about "fake privilege" — a practice of unnecessarily involving a lawyer in a matter to make it confidential — an attorney for Epic Games showed jurors in a California federal antitrust case against the tech giant.
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November 09, 2023
Meta Close To Trimming Sarah Silverman's AI Copyright Suit
A California federal judge indicated Thursday he'll dismiss with leave to amend part of a copyright suit against Meta brought by comedian Sarah Silverman and two other authors over the tech giant's AI product LLaMA, including a claim for vicarious infringement the judge called "clearly meritless."
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November 09, 2023
Dish Network Must Keep Fighting $3.3B Spectrum Fraud Suit
A District of Columbia federal judge on Thursday refused to toss a $3.3 billion whistleblower suit accusing Dish Network and its affiliates of fraudulently obtaining small business discounts on wireless spectrum licenses, rejecting the companies' contention that the government clearly already knew about the allegations before the suit's filing.
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November 09, 2023
Mich. Supreme Court Frets Over Free Speech In Robocall Case
One Michigan Supreme Court justice seemed uncomfortable Thursday with the state's "broad" read of a law criminalizing voter intimidation as the high court weighed whether to let the state move forward with prosecuting two conservative political operatives over a robocall campaign that targeted Black voters.
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November 09, 2023
TikTok Says Nonusers 'Pled Themselves Out Of' Privacy Suit
TikTok again urged a California federal judge to toss a proposed class action challenging the social media platform's alleged practice of collecting nonusers' information through code on third-party websites, saying the revised complaint alleges how the technology could be used to invade privacy rights but not that it was.
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November 09, 2023
Paul Clement's Big Idea: Overrule Chevron, Ease Polarization
America's entrenched political polarization has been blamed on gerrymandering, cable news, social media, demographics and other intractable issues. But one of the U.S. Supreme Court bar's most accomplished advocates sees a solution hiding in plain sight: a ruling in his favor in perhaps the biggest showdown of the high court's term.
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November 09, 2023
FCC Chief Counters Hill Critics On Net Neutrality Rules
The head of the Federal Communications Commission fired back at congressional critics of her plan to reinstate net neutrality rules, saying the move would address "several glaring regulatory gaps" left open by earlier Republican policies.
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November 09, 2023
AI Could Expand Price-Fixing To Less Concentrated Markets
The rise of algorithmic pricing is expanding the possibility of anti-competitive price coordination beyond concentrated markets to highly diverse sectors where collusion, tacit or otherwise, may have previously been impossible, a U.S. Department of Justice criminal antitrust enforcement official said Thursday.
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November 09, 2023
FCC Seeks To Pay For School, Library Wi-Fi Hotspots
The Democratic-led Federal Communications Commission plans to expand school and library subsidies to help pay for Wi-Fi hotspots and wireless internet access off-premises.
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November 08, 2023
Google Offered Epic $147M To Prevent App Flight, Jury Told
Google tried to "pay off" Epic Games Inc. by offering it $147 million to put Fortnite on the Google Play Store for fear the game-maker could influence other developers to stay off and cause up to $3.6 billion in losses, an Epic lawyer said Wednesday in a California federal antitrust trial.
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November 08, 2023
Transparency, Injunctions Dominate SEP Feedback
Amazon, Cisco, Dell, Microsoft and other major companies told a trio of federal agencies that the global licensing system for standard-essential patents lacks transparency needed to evaluate whether a license offer is fair, reasonable and nondiscriminatory.
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November 08, 2023
Current Competition Law Applies To AI, Global Enforcers Say
Competition authorities and policymakers from G7 countries and the European Union insisted Wednesday that existing competition law applies to artificial intelligence and that they are prepared to confront abuses if AI becomes dominated by a few players with market power.
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November 08, 2023
Apple, Samsung Can't Get PTAB To Ax Smart Mobile Patent
The Patent Trial and Appeal Board has upheld all claims in a Smart Mobile wireless patent that it has asserted against both Apple and Samsung in district court.
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November 08, 2023
Dish Network Faces Patent Suit Over Ad-Skipping Tech
Dish Network has been accused in a federal lawsuit of infringing two patents about skipping commercials with its line of Hopper brand digital video recorder devices.
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November 08, 2023
Telecom Co. Viasat Must Face Calif. Patent Row
A California federal judge has refused to toss a suit accusing California telecommunications company Viasat of infringing various patents owned by digital storage company Western Digital Technologies.
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November 08, 2023
Industry Groups Urge Senate To Add 'Rip And Replace' Funds
Nine trade groups led by the Competitive Carriers Association called on U.S. Senate leaders from both parties to include $3.1 billion for the "rip and replace" network security program in an emergency spending bill.
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November 08, 2023
Judge Told Google Android Helped Innovate Mobile Market
A former Google executive on Wednesday said in D.C. federal court that the Android operating system competes vigorously with Apple in the mobile device space and that Google's agreements with carriers and manufacturers are meant to help it keep pace.
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November 08, 2023
FCC Urged To Make Clearer Way To File Redlining Complaints
A digital divide advocacy group is rallying behind a series of nondiscrimination proposals from the Federal Communications Commission, but continues to call on the agency to do more to address ongoing digital discrimination.
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November 08, 2023
Google Wins PTAB Invalidation On Voice-Command Patent
The Patent Trial and Appeal Board has found in Google LLC's favor that all claims in a patent for a voice-based information system are invalid, a setback for Parus Holdings Inc. as the two companies battle over patent infringement in California district court.
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November 08, 2023
Sonos Gets PTAB To Review Google Patent In Speaker Fight
The Patent Trial and Appeal Board has agreed to review whether a Google wireless connection patent was invalid, the latest event in a larger fight between the tech giant and rival Sonos.
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November 08, 2023
Ford Can't Arbitrate Warranty Suit Over 3G Shutdown
A California federal judge won't let Ford Motor Co. send to arbitration a proposed class action alleging its vehicles' features shut down after AT&T phased out its 3G network, finding that the automaker can't enforce arbitration agreements in the named plaintiffs' sale or lease contracts.
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November 08, 2023
Broadcasters Add Pressure On FCC To Ditch Ownership Rules
With a deadline looming for the Federal Communications Commission to complete a long-overdue review process of broadcast ownership rules, the National Association of Broadcasters is renewing its calls for the agency to lift ownership restrictions in local markets.
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November 07, 2023
Google's Deleted Chats Draw Scrutiny At Epic Antitrust Trial
Google's failure to preserve some employee chats took center stage at trial Tuesday in Epic Games' California federal antitrust suit alleging that the tech giant monopolizes the Android app market, with one Google executive conceding that he can't guarantee the deleted communications didn't contain evidence related to the case.
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November 07, 2023
SEC's Uyeda Criticizes 'Astonishing' Texting Probe Fines
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commissioner Mark T. Uyeda has criticized the agency's recent enforcement actions involving off-channel communications, calling the civil penalties tied to settled actions "astonishing," as no investor harm has been identified.
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November 07, 2023
Google Exec Says It Needed To Catch Up On Travel Offerings
A Google executive told the D.C. federal court overseeing the government's search monopolization trial Tuesday that the company fell behind its competitors in the travel industry and had to work hard to catch up.
Expert Analysis
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How New Lawyers Can Leverage Feedback For Growth
Embracing constructive criticism as a tool for success can help new lawyers accelerate their professional growth and law firms build a culture of continuous improvement, says Katie Aldrich at Fringe Professional Development.
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Bracing For Rising Cyber-Related False Claims Act Scrutiny
Two recent cyber-related False Claims Act cases illustrate the vulnerability of government contractors, including universities, obliged to self-attest compliance with multiple controls, signal the importance of accurate internal controls and underline the benefits of self-disclosure, say Townsend Bourne and Nikole Snyder at Sheppard Mullin.
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Series
ESG Around The World: Australia
Clive Cachia and Cathy Ma at K&L Gates detail ESG-reporting policies in Australia and explain how the country is starting to introduce mandatory requirements as ESG performance is increasingly seen as a key investment and corporate differentiator in the fight for global capital.
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Key Takeaways For Email Marketing From Experian Settlement
The Federal Trade Commission's recent enforcement action against Experian is a good reminder for companies to assess email marketing practices for compliance with the Controlling the Assault of Non-Solicited Pornography And Marketing Act, including misleading header information, deceptive subject lines and opt-out requirements, says Terese Arenth at Moritt Hock.
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Deepfakes Remain A Threat Ahead Of 2024 Elections
Although this electoral season has already seen phony videos and images created to deceive the voting public — and deepfakes are surely destined to become all the more pervasive — there is still a lack of legislative progress on this issue, says Douglas Mirell at Greenberg Glusker.
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Twitter Legal Fees Suit Offers Crash Course In Billing Ethics
X Corp.'s suit alleging that Wachtell grossly inflated its fees in the final days of Elon Musk’s Twitter acquisition provides a case study in how firms should protect their reputations by hewing to ethical billing practices and the high standards for professional conduct that govern attorney-client relationships, says Lourdes Fuentes at Karta Legal.
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How 2nd Circ. Ruling Fortifies Plaintiff Standing Arguments
The Second Circuit's recent Bohnak v. Marsh & McLennan decision marries the concepts in TransUnion and McMorris — touchstones of Article III standing — and will bolster the standing arguments of plaintiffs who seek damages based on intangible injuries or the risk of future harms, say Raphael Janove at Pollock Cohen, Samantha Holbrook at Shub & Johns and Andrew Ferich at Ahdoot & Wolfson.
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ABA's Money-Laundering Resolution Is A Balancing Act
While the American Bar Association’s recently passed resolution recognizes a lawyer's duty to discontinue representation that could facilitate money laundering and other fraudulent activity, it preserves, at least for now, the delicate balance of judicial, state-based regulation of the legal profession and the sanctity of the attorney-client relationship, say attorneys at Ballard Spahr.
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Behind The Economics Of The DOJ's Case Against Google
Ahead of the U.S. v. Google search monopolization case set for trial in D.C. federal court Tuesday, economist Tessie LiJu Su discusses bundling, exclusive dealing, and the allegations of anti-competitive practices against the technology giant.
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2 High Court Cases Could Upend Administrative Law Bedrock
Next term, the U.S. Supreme Court will be deciding two cases likely to change the nature and shape of agency-facing litigation in perpetuity, and while one will clarify or overturn Chevron, far more is at stake in the other, say Dan Wolff and Henry Leung at Crowell & Moring.
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Law Firm Professional Development Steps To Thrive In AI Era
As generative artificial intelligence tools rapidly evolve, professional development leaders are instrumental in preparing law firms for the paradigm shifts ahead, and should consider three strategies to help empower legal talent with the skills required to succeed in an increasingly complex technological landscape, say Steve Gluckman and Anusia Gillespie at SkillBurst Interactive.
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Schumer Framework May Forge US Model On AI Governance
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer's proposed SAFE Innovation Framework may have the potential to generate thoughtful understanding and governance of artificial intelligence within a meaningful time frame, say Alan Charles Raul and Rimsha Syeda at Sidley.
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The Basics Of Being A Knowledge Management Attorney
Excerpt from Practical Guidance
Michael Lehet at Ogletree Deakins discusses the role of knowledge management attorneys at law firms, the common tasks they perform and practical tips for lawyers who may be considering becoming one.
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Pros And Cons Of Top-Four Network Rule In The Digital Age
In the era of streaming, broadcasters have recently urged the Federal Communications Commission to remove the top-four network rule — which prohibits common ownership of any two major network stations — in some or all markets, but others argue the rule preserves competition and diversity, say Gregg Skall and Ashley Brydone-Jack at Telecommunications Law Professionals.
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3 Areas Look Ripe For New SEP Licensing, Litigation
As we wait for standard-essential patent litigation over 5G, data compression and several other technologies have quietly developed elements that make them attractive to SEP holders, turning them into areas to watch for increased licensing and litigation in the near term, say Brian Johnson and Michael O’Mara at Axinn.