Articles
Guides on intellectual property for Los Angeles businesses, founders, and creators.
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Appian v. Pegasystems: How a $2 Billion Trade-Secret Verdict Came Undone
Liability stood, but the largest damages award in Virginia history collapsed over a single jury instruction. The case is a masterclass in trade-secret causation — and a warning that revenue is not damages.
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Bartz v. Anthropic: Transformative Training, Unforgivable Acquisition
Judge Alsup held that training a large language model on books is 'exceedingly transformative' fair use — while refusing to extend that blessing to the pirated library that fed it. The $1.5 billion settlement that followed shows where the real exposure lies.
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Kadrey v. Meta: A Fair-Use Win That Reads Like a Plaintiffs' Brief
Two days after Bartz, Judge Chhabria also found AI training to be fair use — but went out of his way to say the result reflected a failure of advocacy, not a vindication of the practice. His 'market dilution' theory is the doctrine to watch.
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Thomson Reuters v. Ross: The First Refusal of Fair Use in the AI Era
Before the generative-AI rulings, a Delaware court rejected fair use for using copyrighted material to build an AI legal-research tool — and pointedly distinguished the software cases the technology industry had relied upon. Its reach is narrower than its reputation.
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Lehrman v. Lovo: Why the Right of Publicity — Not Copyright — Governs AI Voice Cloning
A federal court let voice actors' right-of-publicity and contract claims against an AI voice-cloning company proceed while dismissing their copyright theories. The decision maps the legal terrain for performers facing synthetic replicas of their voices.
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Vidal v. Elster: A Unanimous Judgment, a Divided Court, and the Limits of History
The Supreme Court upheld the Lanham Act's bar on registering marks that use a living person's name without consent. The 9-0 result conceals a methodological fracture over whether history alone can resolve a First Amendment question.
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Structured Asset Sales v. Sheeran: The Deposit Copy and the Limits of Owning a Groove
The Second Circuit affirmed that Ed Sheeran's 'Thinking Out Loud' does not infringe 'Let's Get It On,' reaffirming that a common chord progression and harmonic rhythm are not protectable — and that pre-1978 song copyrights are bounded by the deposit copy.
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Hachette v. Internet Archive: The End of 'Controlled Digital Lending' as a Fair-Use Theory
The Second Circuit held that scanning print books and lending the digital copies — even one-to-one — is not fair use. The decision turns on a narrowed conception of transformative use and the primacy of the licensing market.
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Dewberry Group v. Dewberry Engineers: Corporate Separateness Survives the Lanham Act
A unanimous Supreme Court held that a trademark plaintiff awarded the 'defendant's profits' may recover only the named defendant's profits — not those of its non-party affiliates. The result is a $43 million award vacated and a lesson in how to plead.
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Amgen v. Sanofi: The Enablement Tax on Functional Genus Claims
A unanimous Supreme Court invalidated Amgen's antibody patents for failing to enable the full scope of what they claimed. The decision revives a demanding, century-old conception of the patent bargain with particular force in the life sciences.
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LKQ v. GM: The Federal Circuit Dismantles the Design-Patent Obviousness Test
Sitting en banc, the Federal Circuit overruled the four-decade-old Rosen-Durling framework and folded design-patent obviousness into the flexible Graham analysis used for utility patents. Design patents just became easier to challenge.
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EcoFactor v. Google: The Federal Circuit Sharpens the Gatekeeper's Knife on Damages
Sitting en banc, the Federal Circuit threw out a patent-damages verdict because the royalty expert's per-unit rate rested on lump-sum licenses that did not support it. The decision is a Rule 702 warning to the patent-damages bar.
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Authorship Without an Author: Thaler v. Perlmutter and the Human Floor of Copyright
The D.C. Circuit held that the Copyright Act requires a human author, foreclosing registration of a work generated autonomously by an AI system — and the Supreme Court has now declined to disturb that conclusion.
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When Purpose Eclipses Meaning: Warhol v. Goldsmith and the Narrowing of Transformative Fair Use
The Supreme Court's 7-2 decision in Andy Warhol Foundation v. Goldsmith (May 18, 2023) reframed fair use's first factor, holding that a commercial use sharing the same purpose as the original photograph does not become 'transformative' merely by adding new artistic meaning.
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Where Ideas End and Expression Begins: The Ninth Circuit Revives Tangle's Sculpture Suit Against Aritzia
In Tangle, Inc. v. Aritzia, Inc., the Ninth Circuit reversed a Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal, holding that the selection and arrangement of otherwise unprotectable sculptural elements can be protected and that kinetic, manipulable works are sufficiently 'fixed.'
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The Server Test Survives: Hunley v. Instagram and the Public Display Right for Embedded Images
In Hunley v. Instagram (9th Cir. 2023), the Ninth Circuit reaffirmed the Perfect 10 'server test,' holding that embedding an Instagram photo does not 'display a copy' and so cannot anchor direct or secondary infringement liability.
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When a Bundle Beats the Blanket: The MLC's Section 115 Royalty Fight With Spotify
Inside Mechanical Licensing Collective v. Spotify, the S.D.N.Y. dispute over whether adding audiobooks turns Premium into a royalty-discounted 'bundle' under the Section 115 compulsory mechanical license.
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Can a TV Buyer Enforce the GPL? SFC v. Vizio Heads Toward a Landmark Trial
A December 2025 summary-adjudication order in Software Freedom Conservancy v. Vizio narrows the case but leaves the central question intact: whether an ordinary purchaser can enforce open-source copyleft as a third-party beneficiary on the eve of an August 2026 trial.
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After Cox v. Sony: The Supreme Court Rebuilds the Wall Around ISP Safe Harbors
In a unanimous March 2026 judgment, the Supreme Court reversed the $1 billion verdict against Cox Communications, holding that knowledge alone cannot make an internet provider a contributory infringer — reshaping how the DMCA's § 512 safe harbor matters.
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Stripping the Byline: The § 1202(b) Ruling in The Intercept Media v. OpenAI and the SDNY CMI Split
Judge Rakoff let The Intercept's DMCA § 1202(b)(1) copyright-management-information claim against OpenAI survive dismissal while tossing the § 1202(b)(3) claim, splitting from Raw Story v. OpenAI on standing and reshaping CMI litigation in AI-training cases.
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Honest Mistakes of Law Survive: Unicolors v. H&M and the Scienter Floor of § 411(b)
In Unicolors v. H&M (2022), the Supreme Court held that a copyright registration is not invalidated by an inaccuracy the applicant did not know was inaccurate — whether the error was one of fact or law.
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When the Author Comes Back: Horror Inc. v. Miller and the Limits of Work-for-Hire
The Second Circuit's 'Friday the 13th' ruling held that screenwriter Victor Miller was an independent contractor, not an employee, letting his § 203 termination notice stand and reclaiming the screenplay.
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Warner Chappell Music v. Nealy: The Supreme Court Unshackles Copyright Damages From the Three-Year Window
In Warner Chappell Music, Inc. v. Nealy (May 9, 2024), a 6-3 Supreme Court held that a copyright owner with a timely claim may recover damages for infringement no matter how long ago it occurred — while pointedly leaving the validity of the discovery rule itself undecided.
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What Survives the Filter: The Ninth Circuit's 'Top Gun: Maverick' Decision and the Limits of Substantial Similarity
In Yonay v. Paramount, the Ninth Circuit affirmed summary judgment for Paramount over 'Top Gun: Maverick,' holding that a film sharing a real Navy program with a 1983 magazine article copies facts, not protected expression.
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Four Authors, One Vote Short: The Eleventh Circuit, 2 Live Crew, and the Fragility of the Termination Right
In Lil' Joe Records v. Wong Won (11th Cir. 2026), the court held that a 2 Live Crew member's copyright termination interest fell into his Chapter 7 bankruptcy estate, leaving the group one author short of the majority needed to reclaim five albums.
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The Predicate-Act Doctrine Meets Mirrored Servers: Motorola Solutions v. Hytera and the Limits of U.S. Copyright Abroad
The Seventh Circuit's July 2024 decision in Motorola Solutions v. Hytera shows how the presumption against extraterritoriality and the predicate-act doctrine cabin recovery of foreign copyright damages — even amid blatant source-code theft — while the Defend Trade Secrets Act reaches worldwide sales.
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When a Generic Word Buys a Domain: USPTO v. Booking.com and the Limits of Per Se Genericness
The Supreme Court rejected a categorical rule that 'generic.com' terms are unregistrable, holding that consumer perception alone determines whether such a composite is generic—reshaping distinctiveness analysis for the domain-name economy.
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Who Decides Priority: Hana Financial v. Hana Bank and the Jury's Role in Trademark Tacking
A unanimous Supreme Court held that whether a later mark may 'tack' onto an earlier mark's priority date is a question for the jury—locating the decisive moment in a clearance dispute in the fact-finder's assessment of consumer perception.
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In re Chestek: When a Trademark Refusal Turns on Administrative Law, Not Trademark Law
The Federal Circuit affirmed a refusal to register CHESTEK LEGAL because the applicant used a P.O. box rather than a domicile address — and in doing so treated the USPTO's domicile rule as a procedural rule exempt from notice-and-comment.
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When Fraud Doesn't Cancel: Great Concepts v. Chutter and the Limits of Section 14
The Federal Circuit holds that a fraudulent Section 15 incontestability declaration cannot, by itself, justify cancellation of a trademark registration under Section 14.
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Token Use Won't Save a Registration: Social Technologies v. Apple and the 'Memoji' Mark
The Ninth Circuit holds that a rushed, litigation-driven app launch is not the bona fide use in commerce the Lanham Act demands — and Apple gets the MEMOJI registration cancelled.
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When a Mark Is Used 'As a Mark': Punchbowl v. AJ Press and the Shrinking Reach of Rogers
The Ninth Circuit reversed itself after Jack Daniel's, holding that Rogers cannot shield a name used as a source identifier and sending the dispute back for an ordinary likelihood-of-confusion analysis.
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Hermès v. Rothschild: The MetaBirkins Verdict and Trademark Dilution in the NFT Market
A Manhattan jury found that Mason Rothschild's MetaBirkins NFTs infringed and diluted the famous Birkin mark — and that the First Amendment did not save them. The case maps how dilution doctrine and Rogers v. Grimaldi apply to digital goods.
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The Boot That Could Not Become a Brand: TBL Licensing v. Vidal and the Limits of Product-Configuration Trade Dress
The Fourth Circuit refused to register the configuration of Timberland's iconic tan work boot, holding that Timberland's evidence proved the fame of the whole boot but not acquired distinctiveness in the discrete features it claimed.
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Re-Registration as Cybersquatting: Prudential v. Shenzhen Stone and the Reach of the ACPA
The Fourth Circuit held that a domain 'registration' actionable under the Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act includes later re-registrations, then sustained in rem jurisdiction over PRU.COM and a bad-faith finding against its Chinese owner.
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Counterfeit Without a Fake: Chanel v. What Goes Around Comes Around and the Genuine-Goods Trap
A New York jury found a luxury reseller liable for willful counterfeiting and false association over Chanel-branded bags—holding that even items that left a Chanel factory can be 'counterfeit' when they fail the brand's quality controls.
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Rejection Is Breach, Not Rescission: Mission Product Holdings v. Tempnology and the Survival of Trademark Licenses in Bankruptcy
The Supreme Court held that a debtor-licensor's rejection of a trademark license in bankruptcy breaches the contract but does not strip the licensee of its right to keep using the mark.
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Abitron v. Hetronic: Drawing the Line at Domestic 'Use in Commerce'
The Supreme Court holds the Lanham Act's core infringement provisions reach only conduct where the infringing use in commerce is domestic, vacating a $96 million judgment.
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Belmora v. Bayer: A Foreign Mark Owner With No U.S. Use Can Still Sue Under §43(a)
The Fourth Circuit's FLANAX decision held that a Mexican trademark owner who never used its mark in U.S. commerce may nonetheless pursue Lanham Act unfair-competition and false-advertising claims — unsettling the conventional assumption that U.S. use is the price of admission.
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Crocs v. Effervescent: When Calling Your Product 'Patented' Becomes False Advertising
The Federal Circuit held that a false claim that a product feature is 'patented' can support a Lanham Act false-advertising claim — provided it misleads consumers about the nature, characteristics, or qualities of the goods, not merely their authorship.
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Recentive Analytics v. Fox: Generic Machine Learning Meets the Abstract-Idea Bar
The Federal Circuit's first precedential machine-learning eligibility ruling holds that applying off-the-shelf models to a new data environment claims an abstract idea under § 101.
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Celanese v. ITC: The On-Sale Bar Survives the AIA for Secret Processes
The Federal Circuit held that selling a product made by a secret process starts the on-sale clock against a later patent on that process — and the America Invents Act did nothing to change it.
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Apple's Watch Stays Banned: The Federal Circuit Affirms the Masimo Section 337 Exclusion Order
The Federal Circuit upheld the ITC's import ban on certain Apple Watch models, validating Masimo's pulse-oximetry patents and a domestic industry built on prototypes.
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Virtek Vision v. Assembly Guidance: A Reason to Combine, Not Just the Parts
The Federal Circuit reversed a PTAB obviousness finding because the petitioner showed the prior art's pieces existed but never explained why a skilled artisan would assemble them that way.
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Grace Instrument v. Chandler: When the Specification, Not the Dictionary, Decides Definiteness
The Federal Circuit revived an oil-well viscometer patent by holding that a term of degree must be measured against the intrinsic record before a court reaches for a dictionary — while affirming a separate means-plus-function construction.
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Sonos v. Google: When a Long-Pending Utility Patent Becomes Unenforceable
Judge Alsup wiped out a $32.5 million verdict by holding that Sonos's zone-scene patents were equitably unenforceable for prosecution laches—then the Federal Circuit reversed on prejudice. A roadmap to the limits of the continuation game.
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Roses Are Patented: David Austin Roses v. GCM Ranch and the Asexual-Reproduction Pleading Burden
A Texas court dismissed a rose breeder's plant-patent claim because it never alleged how its rivals asexually reproduced the patented varieties, spotlighting the unusual infringement element baked into 35 U.S.C. §§ 161-164.
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In re Cellect: When Patent Term Adjustment Meets Double Patenting
The Federal Circuit held that obviousness-type double patenting is measured against a patent's post-PTA expiration date, reshaping prosecution strategy for patent families.
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Who Proves the Diligent Search? Ironburg v. Valve and the Burden of IPR Estoppel
The Federal Circuit adopts a skilled-searcher standard for Section 315(e)(2) estoppel and places the burden of proving it on the patent owner, not the petitioner.
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K-fee v. Nespresso: How an Ambiguous Foreign File Wrapper Failed to Shrink a Claim
The Federal Circuit reversed a claim construction that read 'barcode' to exclude bit codes, holding that K-fee's statements to the European Patent Office were too ambiguous to disclaim the term's full ordinary meaning.
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When Canceling a Claim Forfeits Equivalents: Colibri Heart Valve v. Medtronic
The Federal Circuit erased a $106M verdict, holding that canceling a broader claim during prosecution surrenders that subject matter for the doctrine of equivalents.
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Natera v. NeoGenomics: Causal Nexus and the Equity of a Two-Player Market
The Federal Circuit affirms a preliminary injunction barring a competing cancer-recurrence assay, sharpening how courts trace irreparable harm to the patented method through the causal-nexus requirement.
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Ericsson v. Lenovo: The Federal Circuit Reopens the Door to Anti-Suit Injunctions in Global FRAND Wars
The Federal Circuit vacated a denial of a foreign anti-suit injunction, tying an SEP holder's right to injunctive relief to its good-faith FRAND-negotiation duty.
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Thaler v. Vidal: Why a Machine Cannot Be a Named Inventor — Yet
The Federal Circuit held that the Patent Act's word 'individual' means a human being, so an AI system called DABUS cannot be listed as an inventor — without deciding whether AI-assisted inventions are patentable at all.
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When a 'Skinny Label' Is Not Skinny Enough: GSK v. Teva and the Limits of the Section viii Carve-Out
The Federal Circuit's reinstated $235 million verdict in GSK v. Teva tests whether a generic's carve-out label can shield it from induced infringement of a method-of-treatment patent.
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How Far Does a U.S. Patent Reach? WesternGeco v. ION and Foreign Lost Profits
The Supreme Court held that a patent owner can recover lost foreign profits flowing from a domestic act of infringement under 35 U.S.C. § 271(f)(2).
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When 'Everything Is a Trade Secret' Is Nothing: Sysco Machinery v. DCS USA
The Fourth Circuit affirms dismissal of a DTSA complaint that defined its trade secrets three ways, holding that sweeping definitions fail the particularity that the statute's secrecy and value elements presuppose.
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Turret Labs v. CargoSprint: When Locking the Windows Isn't Enough
The Second Circuit affirmed dismissal of a software trade-secret claim because the owner delegated access control to a licensee and never required anyone downstream to keep the secret.
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Insulet v. EOFlow: A $452 Million Verdict, an Avoided-Cost Theory, and the Limits of Trade-Secret Recovery
How a Massachusetts jury found a competing insulin-patch maker liable for misappropriating Omnipod design secrets — and why the court then cut the award by nearly 90 percent.
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Attia v. Google: The DTSA Reaches Pre-Enactment Secrets, But Only If They Survive
The Ninth Circuit endorses a continued-use theory under the Defend Trade Secrets Act, then holds that Google's published patent applications extinguished the very secret the plaintiff needed.
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Metron Nutraceuticals v. Cook: The Contract Carve-Out That Survives UTSA Displacement
Predicting Ohio law, the Sixth Circuit held that the Uniform Trade Secrets Act does not displace a plain breach-of-contract claim — a reading that restores the statute's savings clause and its promise of uniformity.
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When a Confidentiality Clause Becomes a Federal Violation: The SEC's $18 Million J.P. Morgan Whistleblower Order
The SEC's largest stand-alone Rule 21F-17(a) settlement turned a routine settlement-release clause into an enforcement event, showing that NDAs are now read for what they silence, not just what they protect.
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Caudill Seed v. Jarrow Formulas: When a Researcher Carries the Library Out the Door
The Sixth Circuit affirmed a multimillion-dollar trade-secret verdict against a competitor that hired away a director of research and acquired, with him, a decade of curated broccoli-extract know-how.
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When the National Non-Compete Ban Fell: Ryan, LLC v. FTC and the Return to Trade-Secret Protection
A Texas federal court set aside the FTC's nationwide non-compete ban for lack of rulemaking authority — and the agency ultimately let the vacatur stand, leaving trade-secret law as employers' primary backstop.
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PepsiCo v. Redmond: The Case That Built the Inevitable Disclosure Doctrine
A departing executive who never took a document could still be enjoined — the Seventh Circuit's 1995 ruling let an employer prove misappropriation by showing disclosure was inevitable, and the country has been divided over it ever since.
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Brunswick Rail v. Sultanov: Why Courts Keep Saying No to DTSA Seizure
An early decision construing the Defend Trade Secrets Act's ex parte civil seizure remedy denies the order as unnecessary, modeling the preservation-and-TRO path most courts now follow.
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United States v. Xiaorong You: A 168-Month Sentence and the Anatomy of Economic Espionage
A Coca-Cola chemist's theft of $120 million in BPA-free coating formulas produced one of the rare convictions under the Economic Espionage Act's foreign-government provision — and a Sixth Circuit opinion clarifying what the government must prove.
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Secrecy or Monopoly: What Kewanee Oil v. Bicron Still Teaches About the Patent–Trade-Secret Choice
A half-century after the Supreme Court blessed trade secrets, Kewanee Oil v. Bicron remains the clearest map of when to file and when to keep quiet.
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vPersonalize v. Magnetize: How a U.S. Court Reached a U.K. Defendant Under the DTSA
A Washington federal court holds that the Defend Trade Secrets Act reaches a foreign defendant whenever an act in furtherance occurs in the United States — even an act the defendant did not commit.
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Hart v. Electronic Arts: The Transformative-Use Test and an Athlete's Likeness in a Video Game
The Third Circuit held that EA's photorealistic use of a college quarterback's avatar in NCAA Football was not transformative enough to defeat his right of publicity — adopting the transformative-use test as the circuit's framework for likeness-in-media disputes.
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Midler v. Ford Motor Co.: When a Sound-Alike Steals an Identity
The Ninth Circuit held that deliberately imitating a widely known singer's distinctive voice to sell a product is a California tort — even though a voice itself is not copyrightable.
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Are You Experienced, After Death? The Ninth Circuit, Jimi Hendrix, and the Post-Mortem Right of Publicity
Experience Hendrix v. HendrixLicensing.com upheld Washington's post-mortem publicity statute as applied to a New York-domiciled rock legend, exposing how a fractured state-law patchwork now governs the dead.
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No One Owns History: De Havilland v. FX and the First Amendment Defense to Right-of-Publicity Claims
How California's appellate court used the First Amendment to dismiss Olivia de Havilland's publicity and false-light suit over the 'Feud' docudrama.
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When a Robot Becomes You: White v. Samsung and the Reach of Identity
The Ninth Circuit held that a game-show robot could appropriate Vanna White's identity, untethering the right of publicity from name and likeness.
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House v. NCAA: The Settlement That Made College Athletes Paid Licensors
Judge Wilken's final approval of the $2.8 billion House settlement converts decades of amateurism doctrine into a licensed, revenue-shared market for athlete name, image, and likeness.
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A Release Is Not a License to All: Electra v. 59 Murray Enterprises and the Models Whose Images Sold the Nightclub
The Second Circuit revived right-of-publicity claims by professional models whose photographs were lifted to advertise strip clubs online, holding that a release signed for one purpose is not consent against the world.
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Identity Is Not a Work of Authorship: Toney v. L'Oréal and the Limits of Copyright Preemption
The Seventh Circuit's Toney decision holds that the Copyright Act does not preempt an Illinois Right of Publicity Act claim, anchoring the rule that a persona is neither fixed nor authored.
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Milton Greene v. Marilyn Monroe LLC: How a Star's Domicile Decided Who Owns Her Image
The Ninth Circuit held that Marilyn Monroe's estate, having sworn for forty years that she died a New Yorker to dodge California estate tax, was judicially estopped from claiming California domicile to capture a posthumous right of publicity worth millions.
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Booth v. Colgate-Palmolive: New York's Refusal to Protect a Voice Alone
A Southern District of New York court held that imitating an actress's famous voice — without using her name or likeness — was not unfair competition, defamation, or a Lanham Act violation.
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Kadant v. Seeley: Reverse Engineering as a Complete Answer
A Northern District of New York court denied a trade-secret injunction where a former employee's new employer plausibly reverse-engineered publicly available parts—and the plaintiff could not prove its specifications were secret or improperly taken.
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The Charbucks Saga: How Starbucks Lost Its Dilution-by-Blurring Claim
After more than a decade of litigation, the Second Circuit held that even a famous mark cannot prove dilution by blurring without meaningful similarity and real evidence of association — affirming judgment for a tiny New Hampshire roaster.
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Sears v. Stiffel: The Pole Lamp That Made Copying a Federal Right
When Stiffel's lamp patents were held invalid, the Supreme Court ruled that no state unfair-competition law could stop Sears from copying the unpatented design — establishing that exclusivity flows only from the federal patent bargain.
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The Intellectual Property Door in Section 230: Hepp v. Facebook
The Third Circuit held that Section 230 does not immunize platforms from state right-of-publicity claims, splitting from the Ninth Circuit on the law's intellectual-property carve-out.
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Sonix v. Publications International: How a Term of Degree Survives
The Federal Circuit held 'visually negligible' definite because it was anchored to what the normal human eye can perceive, supplying the objective baseline that purely subjective terms lack.
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MLK Center v. American Heritage Products: A Descendible Publicity Right Without a Lifetime License
Georgia's Supreme Court held that Dr. King's right of publicity survived his death and was inheritable even though he never licensed his identity for profit — uncoupling descendibility from lifetime commercial exploitation and reshaping what a non-commercial figure's estate can protect.
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All In or Not at All: Pandora v. ASCAP and the Limits of Partial Withdrawal
The Second Circuit held that ASCAP's consent decree forbids music publishers from selectively pulling their performance rights out of the collective for digital services like Pandora.
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The Dancing Baby's Rule: Lenz v. Universal and the § 512(f) Duty to Consider Fair Use
The Ninth Circuit held that a copyright owner must consider fair use in good faith before sending a DMCA takedown notice — and that failing to do so can expose the sender to liability for misrepresentation under § 512(f).
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StorageCraft v. Kirby: A Reasonable Royalty Even When the Thief Never Profited
The Tenth Circuit, in an opinion by then-Judge Gorsuch, upheld a $2.92 million reasonable-royalty award for stolen source code — confirming that a misappropriator can owe royalty damages for mere disclosure, with no proof of commercial use.
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United States v. Liew: The First Jury Conviction for Economic Espionage
A California consultant who sold DuPont's chloride-route titanium-dioxide process to Chinese state firms became the first defendant convicted by a jury under the economic-espionage section of the EEA, and the Ninth Circuit affirmed.
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California's Digital-Replica Statutes: AB 2602 and AB 1836 Split the Living from the Dead
California's two 2024 digital-replica laws take different routes — one voids consent-by-contract for living performers, the other extends the post-mortem right of publicity to AI replicas of the deceased — and together they reset the rules for Hollywood.
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ConFold v. Polaris: When a Design Is Neither a Trade Secret Nor Covered by the NDA
Judge Posner explained why a container design disclosed in a bid — conceded not to be a trade secret and outside the parties' logistics-only nondisclosure agreement — was free for the recipient to use.
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Herb Reed v. Florida Entertainment: eBay Comes for the Trademark Injunction
The Ninth Circuit became the first court of appeals to declare squarely that trademark plaintiffs no longer enjoy a presumption of irreparable harm — they must prove it, like everyone else seeking an injunction.
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IBM v. Visentin: When New York Recognized Inevitable Disclosure and Still Said No
A federal court let an IBM executive walk straight to Hewlett-Packard, holding that a doctrine New York entertains in theory fails without particularized secrets, near-identical roles, and proof of bad faith.
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Lamparello v. Falwell: A Misspelled Domain, a Gripe Site, and the Limits of Cybersquatting Law
The Fourth Circuit held that fallwell.com was neither infringing nor cybersquatting, because likelihood of confusion turns on the whole site and the ACPA targets profit-seeking, not criticism.
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Licensing the Image, Not the Athlete: Maloney v. T3Media and Copyright Preemption of the Right of Publicity
The Ninth Circuit held that former NCAA players' publicity claims over an online photo-licensing service were preempted by copyright, because the suit attacked control of the photographs themselves rather than use of the players' identities on merchandise or in ads.
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When Search Results Aren't Confusing: Multi Time Machine v. Amazon and the Limits of Initial-Interest Confusion
On rehearing, a divided Ninth Circuit held that a clearly labeled list of substitute products is not trademark infringement—narrowing initial-interest confusion for the era of online search.
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The Pose Belongs to No One: Rentmeester v. Nike and the Thin Copyright in a Photograph
The Ninth Circuit held that Nike's iconic Michael Jordan 'Jumpman' photograph did not infringe Jacobus Rentmeester's earlier image, because copyright protects a photograph's expression of a pose — not the pose itself.
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Robert Bosch v. Pylon: Burying the Presumption of Irreparable Harm — Then Granting the Injunction Anyway
The Federal Circuit finally confirmed that eBay abolished the presumption of irreparable harm, yet reversed a district court that had used categorical reasoning to deny a competitor's permanent injunction.
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Syntel v. TriZetto: The Limits of 'Avoided Costs' as DTSA Damages
The Second Circuit erased a roughly $285 million unjust-enrichment award, holding that avoided development costs cannot be stacked on top of lost profits without proof of harm beyond actual loss.
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TCL v. Ericsson: The Seventh Amendment Collides With Judge-Set FRAND Rates
The Federal Circuit vacated a global FRAND license set in a bench trial, holding that a 'release payment' for past infringement triggered the constitutional right to a jury.
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Wal-Mart v. Samara Brothers: Product Design Is Never Inherently Distinctive
The Supreme Court's unanimous 2000 decision held that a product's design can qualify as protectable trade dress only on proof of secondary meaning, and told courts to classify ambiguous cases as design — drawing the line that *Two Pesos* had left open.
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Axis Steel Detailing v. Prilex: When 'Extraordinary Circumstances' Are Actually Met
A Utah court granted a DTSA ex parte seizure where the defendants had supplied false information, hidden and moved files, and possessed the technical skill to defeat an ordinary injunction—a rare case clearing the statute's high bar.
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BDO Seidman v. Hirshberg: New York's Blueprint for Partially Enforcing an Overbroad Covenant
New York's high court refused to void an overbroad non-compete outright, instead narrowing it to the clients the employee personally served and articulating the state's modern reasonableness test.
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Not a Place You'll Go: Dr. Seuss v. ComicMix and the Limits of the Mashup
The Ninth Circuit held that a Star Trek-Seuss mashup was infringement, not parody, drawing a hard line between transformation and clever copying.
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A Blocked Application Is a Real Interest: Empresa Cubana v. General Cigar and Standing Through the Embargo
The Federal Circuit held that the Cuban embargo did not strip a Cuban tobacco entity of its statutory cause of action to cancel General Cigar's COHIBA registrations.
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Inventus Power v. Shenzhen Ace: The DTSA Follows Trade Secrets to China
A federal court kept a trade-secret suit against a Chinese competitor in Illinois, holding China an inadequate forum and wielding the DTSA's extraterritorial reach and a worldwide TRO.
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MicroStrategy v. Business Objects: A Field Manual for Reasonable Secrecy Measures
An Eastern District of Virginia bench trial inventoried what reasonable measures look like in practice, then found misappropriation in only two of eighteen alleged disclosures.
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Sabre GLBL v. Shan: Building a Competitor on the Clock, and Paying for the Head Start
The Third Circuit confirmed an arbitration award against a two-decade Sabre employee who launched a rival Chinese company while still on the payroll, including more than a million dollars in head-start damages.
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One Application, Thousands of Photographs: Alaska Stock v. Houghton Mifflin and Group Registration
In Alaska Stock v. Houghton Mifflin (9th Cir. 2014), the court upheld a stock agency's database registrations that did not name every photographer or title, deferring to three decades of Copyright Office practice on registering collections.
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Brown v. TGS Management: When a Confidentiality Clause Becomes an Illegal Noncompete
A California appellate court voided an employer's sweeping confidentiality provisions as a de facto noncompete that barred a trader from his profession for life.
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Lew Alcindor in an Oldsmobile Ad: Abdul-Jabbar and the Persistence of a Former Name
The Ninth Circuit held that a celebrity's discarded birth name remains part of his identity, reviving claims over an Oldsmobile commercial.
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Alice Corp. v. CLS Bank: The Two-Step Test That Reshaped Software Patents
A unanimous Supreme Court held that implementing an abstract idea on a generic computer adds nothing patentable, extending the Mayo framework to software and business methods.
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Planting Is Making: Bowman v. Monsanto and Patent Exhaustion for Self-Replicating Seeds
A unanimous Supreme Court held that patent exhaustion does not let a farmer grow successive generations of a patented seed, because planting and harvesting creates new copies rather than merely using a purchased one.
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Comcast v. ITC: Domestic Conduct, Imported Boxes, and Section 337's Long Reach
The Federal Circuit upheld an exclusion order against Comcast's set-top boxes, holding the ITC may act even where the inducing conduct is entirely domestic and Comcast itself imported nothing.
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Believing a Patent Is Invalid Is No Defense: Commil USA v. Cisco Systems
The Supreme Court held that a good-faith belief in a patent's invalidity does not negate the intent required for induced infringement, while reaffirming that inducement demands knowledge of infringement.
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Filtering the Code: How Computer Associates v. Altai Brought the Idea-Expression Line to Software
Computer Associates v. Altai adapted the idea-expression dichotomy to computer programs through its abstraction-filtration-comparison test, filtering out elements dictated by efficiency, external constraints, and the public domain.
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Feltner v. Columbia Pictures: The Jury's Role in Setting Statutory Damages
The Supreme Court held that the Seventh Amendment guarantees a jury trial on statutory copyright damages — including the amount itself — reshaping how infringement awards are decided.
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A Performance Is Not a Work: Garcia v. Google and the Author Behind the Camera
The en banc Ninth Circuit rejected an actress's claim to copyright in her brief filmed performance, holding that an individual acting contribution does not create a separately ownable work.
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The Law Belongs to Everyone: Georgia v. Public.Resource.Org and the Government Edicts Doctrine
In Georgia v. Public.Resource.Org (2020), a divided Supreme Court held that the annotations in Georgia's official annotated code are uncopyrightable government edicts because they are authored by legislators acting as legislators.
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Conduct, Not Speech: The D.C. Circuit Upholds DMCA § 1201 in Green v. DOJ
A cryptographer and a hardware hacker argued that the DMCA's anti-circumvention rules censor lawful research and tinkering; the D.C. Circuit held that § 1201 regulates conduct and survives the First Amendment.
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ITC v. Punchgini: The Second Circuit Refuses to Find a Famous-Marks Doctrine in Federal Law
The Second Circuit holds that Congress has not incorporated the famous-marks doctrine into the Lanham Act, then certifies the state-law question to New York's high court.
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Instance, Expense, and the Heirs' Lost Recapture: Marvel Characters v. Kirby
The Second Circuit held that Jack Kirby's foundational 1958-1963 comics were works made for hire under the 1909 Act's 'instance and expense' test, defeating his children's § 304(c) termination notices.
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Mattel v. MCA Records: 'Barbie Girl,' Parody, and the Limits of a Famous Mark
The Ninth Circuit adopted the Rogers test, protected a pop song that lampooned an American icon, and closed with one of the most quoted lines in trademark law: the parties are advised to chill.
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Stories Taken from Life: Sarver v. Chartier and the First Amendment Shield for Films
A soldier who said The Hurt Locker was built on his life lost to the First Amendment, which protects storytellers who transform real people into art on matters of public concern.
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Disassembly as Fair Use: Why Sega v. Accolade Still Governs Reverse Engineering
The Ninth Circuit held that copying object code to study a program's unprotected functional elements can be fair use, securing reverse engineering as a tool for interoperability and competition.
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A Mark Is Nothing Without Its Goodwill: Sugar Busters v. Brennan and the Assignment-in-Gross Trap
The Fifth Circuit held that the SUGARBUSTERS service mark, bought from a diabetic-supply store and used for a diet book, was assigned in gross and invalid because the goodwill did not transfer with it.
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T.A.B. Systems v. PacTel Teletrac: Pre-Sales Publicity Counts Only If the Public Was Actually Reached
The Federal Circuit's analogous-use decision held that promotional activity can establish trademark priority before sales — but only on proof that it reached a substantial portion of the relevant consuming public, not merely that the user intended an association.
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Trader Joe's v. Hallatt: 'Pirate Joe's,' Cross-Border Resale, and a Merits Question in Disguise
The Ninth Circuit revived Trader Joe's claims against a Canadian reseller, holding that the Lanham Act's foreign reach is a question on the merits — not federal jurisdiction — and that buying and harming a brand inside the U.S. can supply the needed domestic nexus.
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Waits v. Frito-Lay: A Distinctive Voice and the Birth of False Endorsement
The Ninth Circuit recognized that imitating a celebrity's distinctive voice to imply sponsorship can be a false-endorsement violation of Section 43(a) of the Lanham Act.
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Capitol Records v. ReDigi: Why You Cannot Resell a Song the Way You Resell a Record
The Second Circuit held that ReDigi's 'used' digital music marketplace necessarily made unauthorized reproductions, so the first-sale defense — which reaches only distribution — could not save it.
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DuPont v. Synvina: Overlapping Ranges and the Burden That Shifts
The Federal Circuit reversed a PTAB win for the patentee, holding that a claimed range overlapping the prior art creates a presumption of obviousness that applies in inter partes review just as in court.
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In re Fisher: Gene Fragments and the Limits of 'Useful'
The Federal Circuit refused patents on five expressed sequence tags whose only disclosed uses were generic research applications, sharpening the 'specific and substantial' utility standard for the genomics era.
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In re Klopfenstein: When a Conference Poster Becomes a 'Printed Publication'
The Federal Circuit held that a slide poster displayed at a scientific meeting can be prior art under §102(b) even though it was never distributed or indexed in any library.
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Johnson v. NCAA: Can a College Athlete Be an Employee?
The Third Circuit refused to treat amateurism as a bar to wage claims, adopting an economic-realities test that could make some college athletes employees entitled to pay under the Fair Labor Standards Act.
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At the Border of Genuine: K Mart v. Cartier and the Gray-Market Compromise
The Supreme Court upheld Customs' common-control exception for gray-market imports while striking the authorized-use exception, defining when genuine foreign goods can be stopped at the U.S. border under the Tariff Act.
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Samsung v. Apple: When Is 'Total Profit' the Profit on the Whole Phone?
A unanimous Supreme Court held that the 'article of manufacture' for design-patent damages under § 289 can be a single component, not necessarily the entire end product sold to consumers.
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Spanski v. Telewizja Polska: A Foreign Broadcaster's Stream Lands Inside U.S. Copyright
The D.C. Circuit held that a foreign broadcaster who directs infringing video-on-demand performances to viewers in the United States commits a domestic violation of the Copyright Act.
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When Claim Construction Is a Fact: Teva Pharmaceuticals v. Sandoz and the Clear-Error Standard
The Supreme Court held that subsidiary factual findings underlying a claim construction must be reviewed for clear error, narrowing decades of de novo appellate review.
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United States v. Arthrex: The Director's Last Word Over the PTAB
The Supreme Court held that administrative patent judges wielded unconstitutional power and fixed the defect by giving the USPTO Director authority to review their decisions.
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Merck v. Integra: How Wide Is the Research Safe Harbor?
A unanimous Supreme Court read the Section 271(e)(1) safe harbor broadly, shielding preclinical experiments on patented compounds whenever there is a reasonable basis to believe they could inform an eventual FDA submission.
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When the Secret Isn't the Wrong: Angelica Textile Services v. Park and the Limits of CUTSA Displacement
The Fourth District reversed summary judgment to hold that California's trade-secret statute does not displace breach-of-contract, fiduciary-duty, conversion, and unfair-competition claims that rest on conduct independent of any misappropriation.
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Two Hats, One Commerce Clause: Christian Faith Fellowship Church v. adidas
A single in-state sale of two caps to an out-of-state buyer was enough use in commerce to defeat cancellation, as the Federal Circuit rejected a de minimis test for Lanham Act use.
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Deepsouth v. Laitram: The Loophole That Built §271(f)
The Supreme Court holds that exporting the unassembled parts of a patented machine for assembly abroad is not 'making' the invention—prompting Congress to rewrite the statute a decade later.
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Juno v. Kite: Written Description and the Genus the Patent Could Not Possess
Reversing a $1.2 billion verdict, the Federal Circuit held that a CAR-T patent claiming any antibody binding element failed written description because it disclosed no representative species or common structure for the vast scFv genus.
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Elementary, After All: Klinger v. Conan Doyle Estate and the Public-Domain Character
Judge Posner held that Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson, as drawn in the pre-1923 stories, are free for anyone to use, rejecting the estate's 'complex character' copyright theory.
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Pannu v. Iolab: The Three-Part Test for Who Counts as a Joint Inventor
The Federal Circuit set out the durable standard for joint inventorship and confirmed that misjoinder or nonjoinder is curable under Section 256 unless the patentee acted with deceptive intent.
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Climbing Down: Skidmore v. Led Zeppelin and the End of the Inverse Ratio Rule
The en banc Ninth Circuit's decision upholding the 'Stairway to Heaven' verdict, confining old compositions to their deposit copies, and abolishing the inverse ratio rule.
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VirnetX v. Cisco: Apportionment Does Not Stop at the Smallest Salable Unit
The Federal Circuit vacated a $368 million award, holding that even the smallest salable unit must be apportioned to the patented features and rejecting the Nash Bargaining Solution as a disguised rule of thumb.
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The Submarine Surfaces: Symbol Technologies v. Lemelson and the Revival of Prosecution Laches
The Federal Circuit affirmed that decades of unreasonable, unexplained delay in prosecuting continuation applications can render the resulting patents unenforceable.
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Davis v. Electronic Arts: Retired NFL Players, the Incidental-Use Defense, and the Limits of First Amendment Cover
The Ninth Circuit held that EA's unlicensed use of thousands of former NFL players on Madden's historic teams was central, not incidental, and that Keller foreclosed EA's transformative-use, public-interest, and Rogers defenses.
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Red, But Only in Contrast: Louboutin v. YSL and the Limits of a Single-Color Mark
The Second Circuit saved Christian Louboutin's red-sole trademark from an aesthetic-functionality death sentence but narrowed it to soles that contrast with the rest of the shoe, leaving YSL's all-red shoe free to walk.
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A Borrowed Life Is Not a Borrowed Face: Gravano v. Take-Two
New York's highest court held that even a video-game character built from a reality star's biography is not actionable when the avatar is not recognizable as her.
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Valentino's Ghost and the First Amendment: Guglielmi's Concurrence That Outlived the Holding
The California Supreme Court's 1979 companion to Lugosi denied a descendible right of publicity, but Chief Justice Bird's concurrence on fictionalized portrayals of the dead became enduringly influential.
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The Sliding Scale of Secondary Meaning: In re Steelbuilding.com and the Burden of Section 2(f)
The Federal Circuit reverses a genericness refusal but affirms that a highly descriptive domain-name mark failed to prove the heightened acquired distinctiveness it needed under Section 2(f).
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AMN Healthcare v. Aya Healthcare: California's Ban Reaches the Employee Non-Solicit
A California appellate panel voided an employee non-solicitation covenant under section 16600 and openly questioned the survival of Loral v. Moyes after Edwards.
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Apple v. Motorola: No Per Se Bar to SEP Injunctions, but a Steep Climb Under eBay
The Federal Circuit rejected any automatic prohibition on injunctions for FRAND-committed patents while affirming that Motorola could not meet the eBay standard for one.
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AvidAir v. Rolls-Royce: Legends, NDAs, and the Modest Bar for Reasonable Secrecy
The Eighth Circuit held that proprietary markings and confidentiality agreements were enough to keep aircraft-overhaul documents secret, even though much of their content was publicly available.
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Big O Tire v. Goodyear: The Birth of Corrective Advertising Damages
When a tire giant rolled out a 'Bigfoot' campaign over a small dealer's prior mark, the Tenth Circuit fashioned a remedy borrowed from the FTC — corrective advertising damages — and capped it at a fraction of the offending ad spend.
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Bimbo Bakeries v. Botticella: How the Third Circuit Enjoined an Executive Without Demanding Inevitability
The fight over the recipe for Thomas' English Muffins produced a Third Circuit ruling that an employer need not prove disclosure is inevitable — only that the threat of misappropriation is sufficiently substantial.
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Bonito Boats v. Thunder Craft: When a State Cannot Re-Create the Patent Monopoly
A unanimous Supreme Court struck down Florida's anti-plug-molding statute, holding that a state may not grant patent-like protection to an unpatented design already disclosed to the public — and explaining why trade-secret law survives the same test.
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Cellular Accessories v. Trinitas: Are a Salesman's LinkedIn Connections His, or the Company's?
A California federal court refused to hold as a matter of law that a departing sales manager's LinkedIn contacts and exported customer database were not trade secrets, sending the question to a jury.
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Two Elements and a Single Factor: Cunningham v. Laser Golf and the Architecture of Cancellation
The Federal Circuit's golf-mark decision supplies the canonical two-part test for cancellation standing and shows how one DuPont factor can decide a likelihood-of-confusion case.
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i4i v. Microsoft: How a Tailored Injunction Survived eBay and Forced Word to Change
The Federal Circuit affirmed a permanent injunction against a feature of Microsoft Word, showing how a small patentee can satisfy all four eBay factors against a dominant competitor when the injunction is carefully scoped.
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IDX v. Epic: A Trade Secret You Cannot Describe Is a Trade Secret You Cannot Protect
Judge Easterbrook held that a software company's forty-three-page, undifferentiated description of its medical-billing system failed to identify any trade secret with the specificity the law demands.
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Interval Licensing v. AOL: When a Term of Degree Has No Anchor
The Federal Circuit's first major post-Nautilus decision held the phrase 'in an unobtrusive manner that does not distract the user' indefinite, illustrating how purely subjective language fails the reasonable-certainty test.
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A Face Is Not a Photograph: KNB Enterprises v. Matthews and Why § 3344 Survives Copyright Preemption
A California appellate court held that models' statutory right-of-publicity claims under Civil Code § 3344 are not preempted by federal copyright, because a human likeness is not copyrightable even when captured in a copyrighted image.
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Magnesita Refractories v. Mishra: Seizing a Laptop Without the DTSA Seizure Statute
An Indiana court held that a Rule 65 temporary restraining order can authorize the seizure of a defendant's laptop to preserve trade-secret evidence, sidestepping the DTSA's stringent ex parte seizure provision entirely.
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PETA v. Doughney: When a Domain Name Is the Punchline, the Parody Defense Fails
The Fourth Circuit held that 'People Eating Tasty Animals' could not shield peta.org behind the First Amendment, because a domain identical to a mark conveys ownership before any visitor sees the joke.
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Ink on Screen: Solid Oak Sketches v. 2K Games and the Copyright Status of Tattoos in Video Games
A Southern District of New York court held that realistically depicting NBA players' tattoos in NBA 2K was non-infringing on three independent grounds — de minimis use, implied license, and fair use.
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Two Pesos v. Taco Cabana: When Trade Dress Is Inherently Distinctive, No Secondary Meaning Required
The Supreme Court's 1992 decision held that inherently distinctive trade dress is protectable under Section 43(a) without proof of secondary meaning — extending to a restaurant's look the same first-day protection long given to coined word marks.
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Storage With Access: UMG v. Shelter Capital and the Reach of the § 512(c) Safe Harbor
The Ninth Circuit held that Veoh's automated transcoding and playback functions fell within 'storage at the direction of a user,' and that general knowledge of infringement on a video platform does not defeat the DMCA safe harbor.
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Sinatra v. Goodyear: When a Music License Defeats a Voice Claim
The Ninth Circuit held that Nancy Sinatra could not stop a tire company from using sound-alike singers on a song it had lawfully licensed — because federal copyright policy preempted her state passing-off claim.
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Infringement Without a Remedy: Eight Mile Style v. Spotify and the Estoppel Trap
A Tennessee court found Spotify infringed Eminem's compositions by streaming them without mechanical licenses, then barred the claim entirely under equitable estoppel for the publisher's strategic delay.
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Chewy Vuiton and the Limits of Dilution: Louis Vuitton v. Haute Diggity Dog
The Fourth Circuit held that a successful parody can defeat both blurring and tarnishment claims under the revised dilution statute — because a good parody depends on, and reinforces, the very distinctiveness it pokes fun at.
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Sino Legend v. ITC: A 10-Year Import Ban and the Limits of Comity
The ITC barred a Chinese chemical maker's imports for trade-secret theft committed in China, and the Federal Circuit and Supreme Court let the exclusion order stand despite a contrary result in Chinese courts.
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Smith v. Dravo: When Sale Talks Create a Duty of Confidence
The Seventh Circuit held that a would-be buyer who received a target's secret designs during acquisition negotiations and then built a competing product had breached a confidential relationship the law implied from the dealings themselves.
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United States v. Hanjuan Jin: The Proof Gap Between Theft and Espionage
A former Motorola engineer caught at O'Hare with stolen telecom secrets was convicted of trade-secret theft but acquitted of economic espionage, illustrating how hard it is to prove intent to benefit a foreign government.
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Mallet v. Lacayo: Why a Trade-Secret Injunction Collapsed for Lack of Specificity
The Third Circuit vacated a baking-supply injunction because the district court never said precisely what the protected trade secrets were — a cautionary tale about identifying the secret before enjoining anyone.
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TAOS v. Renesas: Disgorgement, Apportionment, and the Head-Start Clock
The Federal Circuit dismantled a $48.8 million trade-secret disgorgement award on three fronts at once — who decides it, how to apportion among secrets, and how long the unjust-enrichment clock runs once reverse engineering becomes possible.
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The ELVIS Act: Tennessee Makes 'Voice' a Protected Property Right Against AI Cloning
Tennessee's 2024 ELVIS Act became the first U.S. law to write an individual's voice into the right of publicity and to reach the AI tools that clone it — a statute, not a court ruling, and a template other states are now copying.
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Hosting Counterfeit: Louis Vuitton v. Akanoc and the Liability of the Server Beneath the Storefront
The Ninth Circuit held that a web host that ignores notices and keeps serving counterfeit-selling sites can be liable for contributory trademark infringement—but capped statutory damages at one award per mark, jointly and severally.
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Object Code, Source Code, and the Outer Edge of Supersession: Silvaco v. Intel
The Sixth District extended California's trade-secret displacement doctrine to claims over non-trade-secret data while holding that an end user who runs compiled software does not thereby 'use' the source-code secrets behind it.
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NCAA v. Alston: A Unanimous Court Removes Amateurism's Shield
The Supreme Court unanimously held that NCAA limits on education-related benefits violate the Sherman Act, and Justice Kavanaugh's concurrence signaled that the broader amateurism model was living on borrowed time.
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BladeRoom v. Emerson: The Two-Year NDA That Ate a $60 Million Verdict
The Ninth Circuit held that a sunset clause unambiguously ended an NDA's confidentiality obligations after two years, vacating a verdict built on later conduct.
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Expiration, Not Issuance: Gilead v. Natco Rewrites Obviousness-Type Double Patenting
The Federal Circuit held that a later-issued, earlier-expiring patent can serve as a double-patenting reference, anchoring the doctrine to expiration dates in the post-URAA world.
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Life Technologies v. Promega: One Component Is Not a 'Substantial Portion' Abroad
The Supreme Court holds that supplying a single commodity component from the United States cannot trigger §271(f)(1) liability, reading 'substantial portion' as a quantitative measure.
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How Much Seed Can a Farmer Save? Asgrow Seed v. Winterboer and the Limits of the PVPA Crop Exemption
The Supreme Court read the Plant Variety Protection Act's farmer exemption narrowly, holding that a grower may sell saved seed only in the amount needed to replant his own acreage.
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When the Eye Decides: Cariou v. Prince and Fair Use for Appropriation Art
The Second Circuit held that appropriation art can be transformative fair use even without commenting on the original—then left five works in doubt.
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Estate of Presley v. Russen: Where an Estate's Publicity License Stops and a Tribute Show Begins
A New Jersey court held that Elvis Presley's right of publicity descended to his estate and barred impersonator merchandise and confusing marketing — but declined to shut down the live 'Big El Show' itself, drawing an early line between licensable identity and protected performance.
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Grupo Gigante v. Dallo: The Ninth Circuit Carves a Famous-Marks Exception
The Ninth Circuit recognizes a famous-marks exception to trademark territoriality, allowing a foreign mark to be protected in the United States when a substantial share of the relevant American market knows it.
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Itar-Tass v. Russian Kurier: Splitting Ownership and Infringement Across Borders
The Second Circuit held that the law of the country of origin governs copyright ownership while U.S. law governs infringement occurring on American soil.
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Lexmark v. Static Control: The Two-Part Test for Who May Sue for False Advertising
The Supreme Court replaced three competing circuit tests with a single rule — a false-advertising plaintiff must fall within the Lanham Act's zone of interests and show proximate cause.
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No Inducement Without a Direct Infringer: Limelight Networks v. Akamai
A unanimous Supreme Court held that inducing infringement under Section 271(b) requires a predicate act of direct infringement, refusing to extend liability across divided method steps.
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A Menu Is a Method: How Lotus v. Borland Put Command Hierarchies Beyond Copyright
The First Circuit held that the Lotus 1-2-3 menu command hierarchy is an uncopyrightable 'method of operation' under Section 102(b), a ruling left standing by an evenly divided Supreme Court.
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McBee v. Delica Co.: A Jazz Bassist, a Japanese Label, and the Substantial-Effects Line
The First Circuit's 2005 decision built a separate, tougher test for foreign defendants — demanding a substantial effect on U.S. commerce — and refused to let a Japanese-language website carry an American trademark claim across the Pacific.
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Bots, Warden, and the Two Halves of § 1201: MDY Industries v. Blizzard
The Ninth Circuit split the DMCA's anti-circumvention provisions in two, holding that § 1201(a) protects access independently of infringement — and that a World of Warcraft cheat maker violated it.
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Designs on a Uniform: Star Athletica and the New Test for Separability
In Star Athletica v. Varsity Brands (2017), the Supreme Court replaced a tangle of separability tests with a single statutory inquiry, holding that surface decorations on cheerleading uniforms can be copyrighted as pictorial works.
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Robots at the Cheers Bar: Wendt, Animatronics, and the Persona of a Role
The Ninth Circuit let two Cheers actors take their right-of-publicity claim to trial over airport-bar robots evoking their characters.
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Zazu Designs v. L'Oréal: Why a Few Bottles and a Registration Plan Do Not Win the Mark
The Seventh Circuit's ZAZU decision held that token sales and an intent to register cannot establish trademark priority — only genuine market use that links the mark to a source in consumers' minds will do.
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Control, Not Quality: Eva's Bridal v. Halanick and the Naked License Inside the Family Business
The Seventh Circuit held that a bridal-shop owner who licensed her name to a relative without retaining any authority over how the store was run abandoned the mark through naked licensing.
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A Precondition, Not a Jurisdictional Bar: Reed Elsevier v. Muchnick Untangles § 411(a)
In Reed Elsevier v. Muchnick (2010), a unanimous Supreme Court held that copyright registration under § 411(a) is a claim-processing precondition, not a limit on federal subject-matter jurisdiction — saving a class settlement that swept in unregistered works.
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Control, Intent, and the Limits of Collaboration: Aalmuhammed v. Lee
The Ninth Circuit denied joint-authorship status to a key creative consultant on 'Malcolm X,' holding that significant contribution is not enough without control and a shared intent to be co-authors.
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ClearCorrect v. ITC: Why a Data Stream Is Not an 'Article'
The Federal Circuit held that the ITC cannot bar infringing digital data transmitted electronically across the border, because Section 337 reaches only material things.
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A Series of Abstractions: Learned Hand and the Line No One Can Fix in Nichols v. Universal
In Nichols v. Universal Pictures, Judge Learned Hand articulated the abstractions test for separating unprotectable ideas and stock characters from protectable expression, the most enduring tool in nonliteral copyright analysis.
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The Test That Outlived the Verdict: Polaroid v. Polarad and the Birth of the Confusion Factors
Polaroid lost its 1961 infringement suit to laches—but Judge Friendly's catalogue of variables for gauging confusion became the most cited multifactor test in American trademark law.
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Recording Artists at the Termination Gate: Waite v. UMG Recordings
A Southern District of New York court let recording artists pursue § 203 termination of their master recordings but refused to certify a class, holding the work-for-hire defense too individualized to resolve collectively.
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Ethicon v. U.S. Surgical: One Omitted Co-Inventor Can Sink an Infringement Suit
A co-inventor of even a single claim becomes a co-owner of the whole patent — and the Federal Circuit let that overlooked inventor license the accused infringer and dismantle the case.
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A Dish Is Not a Brand: In re Cordua Restaurants and Genericness for a Restaurant Specialty
The Federal Circuit affirms that CHURRASCOS is generic for restaurant services and that owning a prior registration does not insulate a later application from a genericness refusal.
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Concord Music v. Anthropic: Why the Music Publishers Lost Their Bid to Halt AI Training
A federal judge denied the music publishers a preliminary injunction against Anthropic over Claude's reproduction of song lyrics, finding their proposed order overbroad and their claimed harm unproven — even as a guardrails stipulation quietly reshaped the dispute.
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ABC v. Aereo: When 'Looks Like Cable' Beat the Engineering
The Supreme Court held that Aereo's array of dime-sized antennas publicly performed broadcast television, treating the service as functionally identical to a cable system despite its individualized architecture.
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Caraco v. Novo Nordisk: A Counterclaim to Police the Orange Book
A unanimous Supreme Court held that a generic drugmaker may use the Hatch-Waxman counterclaim to force a brand to correct an overbroad Orange Book use code that was blocking a lawful skinny-label generic.
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Lightly Sketched: Why The Moodsters Lost to Inside Out in Daniels v. Disney
The Ninth Circuit applied its Batmobile test to deny copyright in 'The Moodsters' and rejected the creator's idea-submission claim against Disney's Inside Out.
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Egyptian Goddess v. Swisa: How the Federal Circuit Killed the Point-of-Novelty Test
Sitting en banc, the Federal Circuit scrapped the separate point-of-novelty test for design-patent infringement and made the prior-art-informed ordinary observer the sole standard.
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Helsinn v. Teva: A Secret Sale Still Counts Under the America Invents Act
The Supreme Court held that a confidential commercial sale to a third party can place an invention 'on sale' under the AIA, just as it did under the prior statute.
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In re Cyclobenzaprine: Secondary Considerations Are Not an Afterthought
The Federal Circuit vacated an obviousness judgment because the trial court declared the claims obvious first and only then asked whether objective indicia could rescue them.
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Juicy Whip v. Orange Bang: The Quiet Death of Moral Utility
The Federal Circuit held that an invention designed to fool consumers does not fail the utility requirement, retiring the long-dormant doctrine that deceptive or immoral inventions are unpatentable.
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Fame Falls to the Public: Memphis Development v. Factors and Elvis's Post-Mortem Persona
Why the Sixth Circuit held in 1980 that Elvis Presley's right of publicity died with him and passed into the public domain—an Erie prediction Tennessee would later reject.
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The Specification Comes First: Phillips v. AWH Corp. and the Hierarchy of Claim-Construction Evidence
Sitting en banc, the Federal Circuit demoted the dictionary and elevated the patent's own specification as the single best guide to claim meaning.
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SAS Institute v. Iancu: The End of Partial Institution at the PTAB
The Supreme Court held that when the Patent Office institutes an inter partes review, it must decide the patentability of every claim the petitioner challenged — all or nothing.
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The Spring That Could Not Be Owned: TrafFix Devices v. Marketing Displays and the Functionality Bar
The Supreme Court held that a feature claimed in an expired utility patent is presumptively functional and barred from trade dress protection, and that the availability of alternative designs does not rescue a functional feature.
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Brown v. Electronic Arts: Why the Rogers Test Sank Jim Brown's Likeness Claim the Same Day Keller Won
The Ninth Circuit held that a Hall of Famer's Lanham Act false-endorsement claim over his avatar in Madden NFL was governed by the Rogers artistic-relevance test — and lost — even as a right-of-publicity claim on similar facts survived.
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Mayo v. Prometheus: How a Diagnostic Method Became a Law of Nature
A unanimous Supreme Court held that correlations between drug-metabolite levels and dosing were unpatentable laws of nature, and built the two-step test that would reshape Section 101.
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Preparation Is Not Performance: Aycock Engineering v. Airflite
Decades of planning an air-taxi reservation service could not satisfy the Lanham Act's use requirement, because the AIRFLITE service was never actually rendered to the public.
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Infringing a Feeling? Williams v. Gaye and the "Blurred Lines" Verdict
The Ninth Circuit's decision affirming that 'Blurred Lines' infringed Marvin Gaye's 'Got to Give It Up' and the enduring fear that copyright can now protect a song's groove and vibe.
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Wyeth v. Abbott: One Species, Tens of Thousands of Claims, and Undue Experimentation
A specification that disclosed a single rapamycin compound could not support claims reaching tens of thousands of structurally diverse molecules, the Federal Circuit held, because finding the active ones required excessive screening.
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Raw Material or the Whole Point: Comedy III and the Birth of the Transformative-Use Test
California's Supreme Court borrowed copyright's transformation idea to decide when celebrity art is protected speech—and held that literal Three Stooges drawings are not.
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Petrella v. MGM: Why Laches Cannot Shorten the Copyright Damages Window
The Supreme Court held that the equitable defense of laches cannot bar a copyright damages claim filed within the Act's three-year limitations period — a decision that reoriented how delay is policed in infringement remedies.
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Rogers v. Grimaldi: The Two-Part Test That Made Room for Art in Trademark Law
Ginger Rogers lost her suit over a Fellini film, but the Second Circuit's opinion gave expressive works a durable First Amendment shield against Lanham Act claims that survived for more than three decades.
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Uniloc v. Microsoft: The Death of the 25 Percent Rule of Thumb
The Federal Circuit declared the once-ubiquitous 25 percent royalty shortcut a fundamentally flawed tool, inadmissible under Daubert because it never connects to the facts of the case.
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The New York Times v. OpenAI: Why a Manhattan Judge Let the Output-Infringement Claims Stand
Judge Sidney Stein largely denied OpenAI and Microsoft's motions to dismiss, keeping alive the theory that ChatGPT's outputs and the conduct of its users can infringe — a sharp contrast with how California courts have treated similar allegations.
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Aronson v. Quick Point Pencil: Collecting Royalties on a Patent That Never Issued
The Supreme Court held that federal patent law does not bar a state-law contract requiring perpetual royalties on a keyholder design whose patent application was rejected — a foundational endorsement of the license-instead-of-patent strategy.
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When the Board Speaks First: B&B Hardware and the Preclusive Reach of TTAB Decisions
The Supreme Court holds that a Trademark Trial and Appeal Board likelihood-of-confusion ruling can bind a federal court in later infringement litigation.
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Buffets v. Klinke: Why a Recipe for Macaroni and Cheese Is Not a Trade Secret
The Ninth Circuit held that a buffet chain's everyday recipes and loosely guarded training manuals failed both elements of the secrecy analysis, marking the outer boundary of what 'qualifies' under the Uniform Trade Secrets Act.
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Du Pont v. Christopher: Spying From the Sky as 'Improper Means'
A 1970 Fifth Circuit decision held that aerial photography of a plant under construction was an improper means of acquiring a trade secret, even though the photographers broke no law and breached no confidence.
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Golan v. Holder: When Congress Pulled Foreign Works Back Out of the Public Domain
The Supreme Court upheld Section 514 of the Uruguay Round Agreements Act, holding that Congress may restore copyright to foreign works that had already entered the U.S. public domain.
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When the Magazine Wins: Hoffman v. Capital Cities/ABC and the First Amendment Limit on the Right of Publicity
The Ninth Circuit reversed a $3 million judgment for Dustin Hoffman, holding that a digitally altered photograph in an editorial fashion feature was protected speech, not a commercial appropriation of his likeness.
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The 'Same Nucleus of Facts': K.C. Multimedia v. Bank of America and the Birth of CUTSA Supersession
California's first published decision squarely addressing trade-secret supersession held that the Uniform Trade Secrets Act displaces common-law tort claims resting on the same factual nucleus as the misappropriation theory.
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Rockwell v. DEV Industries: Posner Makes Secrecy a Cost-Benefit Problem
The Seventh Circuit reversed summary judgment to hold that whether a trade-secret owner took 'reasonable' precautions is almost always a jury question turning on the balance of costs and benefits.
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Romag Fasteners v. Fossil: Willfulness Is a Factor, Not a Gate, for Disgorgement
A unanimous Supreme Court held that a trademark plaintiff need not prove willful infringement as a precondition to recovering the infringer's profits under Section 35(a) — reshaping the calculus of every infringement demand letter.
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TianRui v. ITC: How Section 337 Reached a Theft That Happened in China
The Federal Circuit held that the International Trade Commission may bar imports based on trade-secret misappropriation occurring entirely in China, opening the ITC as a forum for cross-border theft.
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DuPont v. Kolon: A $919.9 Million Kevlar Verdict and the Fragile Foundations of Trade-Secret Damages
The largest trade-secret award of its era recovered DuPont's actual loss for the theft of Kevlar know-how — then collapsed because the jury never heard the evidence that might have shown the secrets were not secret at all.
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Lahr v. Adell Chemical Co.: The Sound-Alike Case That Predated Midler by a Generation
Long before the right of publicity protected a voice, the First Circuit held that imitating a famous comedian's distinctive vocal style to sell a product could state a claim for unfair competition.
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Mission Capital Advisors v. Romaka: The First DTSA Seizure, and Why It Took a TRO to Fail First
The earliest civil seizure order under the Defend Trade Secrets Act issued only after a temporary restraining order failed, modeling seizure as the remedy of last resort rather than first resort.
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Nautilus v. Biosig: The Birth of 'Reasonable Certainty' in Patent Definiteness
The Supreme Court discarded the Federal Circuit's forgiving 'insolubly ambiguous' test and replaced it with a public-notice standard that asks whether a patent claim informs skilled artisans of its scope with reasonable certainty.
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United States v. Aleynikov: When Stolen Source Code Fell Outside the EEA
The Second Circuit reversed a Goldman Sachs programmer's criminal conviction because the company's high-frequency trading code was not a product 'produced for or placed in' commerce, exposing a gap Congress closed within months.
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Abercrombie & Fitch v. Hunting World: Judge Friendly's Spectrum and the Architecture of Distinctiveness
The 1976 Second Circuit decision that sorted every word mark into fanciful, arbitrary, suggestive, descriptive, or generic — and cost Abercrombie its 'Safari' trademark — still governs how courts measure distinctiveness today.
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AMD v. Feldstein: A Million Copied Files and the Limits of an Innocent Explanation
A District of Massachusetts judge enjoined three engineers who walked to Nvidia after copying tens of thousands of AMD files, holding that improper acquisition — not proven use — supports a trade-secret injunction.
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Whitewashed Overnight: Castillo v. G&M Realty and VARA's Protection for Art of 'Recognized Stature'
In the 5Pointz appeal, the Second Circuit affirmed a $6.75 million award and held that even temporary aerosol art can attain 'recognized stature' protected against willful destruction under the Visual Artists Rights Act.
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EarthWeb v. Schlack: The Decision That Tried to Cage Inevitable Disclosure
A New York federal court refused to enjoin a departing internet executive and warned that inevitable disclosure should be invoked only in the rarest of cases — building the doctrine's most influential set of brakes.
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eBay v. MercExchange: The Decision That Ended the Automatic Patent Injunction
The Supreme Court refused to treat injunctive relief as an automatic consequence of patent infringement, restoring the traditional four-factor equity test and reshaping patent litigation for a generation.
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Edwards v. Arthur Andersen: California Closes the Door on the 'Narrow-Restraint' Exception
The California Supreme Court held that Business and Professions Code section 16600 voids employee non-competes even when narrowly drawn, rejecting the Ninth Circuit's narrow-restraint gloss.
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Oakwood Laboratories v. Thanoo: What It Takes to Plead 'Use' Under the DTSA
After four dismissals, the Third Circuit revived a microsphere drug-development trade-secret suit and gave the broadest appellate definition yet of what it means to 'use' a trade secret.
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Sporty's Farm v. Sportsman's Market: The First Appellate Word on the Anticybersquatting Act
Decided weeks after the ACPA became law, the Second Circuit's sportys.com ruling supplied the template for how courts would read bad-faith intent, distinctiveness, and a brand-new statute applied to conduct that predated it.
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Young v. NeoCortext: When a Face-Swap App Meets California's Right of Publicity
The Ninth Circuit let a Big Brother contestant's putative class action over the Reface deepfake app proceed, rejecting both a copyright-preemption defense and a transformative-use shield at the pleading stage.
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The 44% Raise the D.C. Circuit Sent Back: Johnson v. Copyright Royalty Board
How the D.C. Circuit vacated the Copyright Royalty Board's Phonorecords III streaming mechanical rate hike for inadequate notice and unexplained reasoning, and what the remand meant for songwriters.
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Moseley v. V Secret Catalogue: When Dilution Demanded Proof of Actual Harm
The Supreme Court held that the original Federal Trademark Dilution Act required proof of actual dilution — not a mere likelihood of it — a reading so demanding that Congress rewrote the statute three years later.
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How Red Must the Flag Be? Viacom v. YouTube and the Specificity of § 512(c) Knowledge
The Second Circuit held that both actual and 'red flag' knowledge under the DMCA must point to specific, identifiable infringements — but revived Viacom's case by reading willful blindness and 'right and ability to control' back into the statute.
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Andersen v. Stability AI: The Theory That Diffusion Models Can 'Contain' the Works They Trained On
A federal court let visual artists' direct and induced copyright claims against AI image generators proceed on the theory that protected works may persist inside the model itself — a holding that reframes how courts think about training data.
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No Certificate, No Courthouse: Fourth Estate v. Wall-Street.com and the Registration Precondition to Suit
In Fourth Estate v. Wall-Street.com (2019), a unanimous Supreme Court held that a copyright owner cannot sue for infringement until the Register of Copyrights has acted on the application — not merely received it.
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Keller v. Electronic Arts: The Ninth Circuit Adopts the Transformative-Use Test for College Athletes' Likenesses
On materially identical facts to Hart, the Ninth Circuit held that EA's photorealistic depiction of college football players in NCAA Football flunked California's transformative-use test and enjoyed no First Amendment shield.
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The Eight-Factor Engine: How AMF v. Sleekcraft Built the West Coast Confusion Test
A 1979 dispute over Slickcraft and Sleekcraft boats gave the Ninth Circuit its enduring eight-factor framework for likelihood of confusion—and a template courts still run today.
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The Method Belongs to the World: How Baker v. Selden Drew Copyright's First Boundary
Baker v. Selden held that copyright in a book explaining a bookkeeping system protects the explanation, not the system itself, founding the idea-expression dichotomy later codified at 17 U.S.C. § 102(b).
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A Single Naked License Sinks a Mark: Barcamerica v. Tyfield Importers and the Duty to Police Quality
The Ninth Circuit held that a trademark owner who licensed its DA VINCI wine mark without meaningful quality control abandoned the mark, even though the licensee made well-regarded wine.
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"Get a License or Do Not Sample": Bridgeport's Bright Line for Sound Recordings
How the Sixth Circuit's Bridgeport Music v. Dimension Films created a near-absolute rule against unlicensed sampling of sound recordings—and why the Ninth Circuit later refused to follow it.
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Who Owns the Statue? CCNV v. Reid and the Birth of the Agency Test
The Supreme Court's unanimous 1989 ruling rejected control-based shortcuts and held that common-law agency principles decide whether a creator is an employee or an independent contractor for work-made-for-hire purposes.
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A Website Is Not a Service: Couture v. Playdom and the Rendering Requirement
The Federal Circuit holds that advertising a service you have not yet performed cannot support a use-based service-mark registration, voiding the PLAYDOM mark ab initio.
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LaserDynamics v. Quanta: How the Entire Market Value Rule Became a Narrow Exception
The Federal Circuit held that a patentee cannot base a royalty on the price of a whole laptop when the invention covers only an optical-drive feature, recasting the entire market value rule as a demand-driven exception.
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Microsoft v. Motorola: The Ninth Circuit Builds the First Judicial Blueprint for a RAND Royalty
The Ninth Circuit affirmed the first judge-set RAND rate for standard-essential patents and a jury's $14.5 million breach-of-contract verdict against the patent holder.
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O'Bannon v. NCAA: The Likeness Case That Cracked Amateurism
The Ninth Circuit held that NCAA rules barring athletes from sharing in the commercial use of their own names, images, and likenesses violated antitrust law, but capped the remedy at the cost of attendance.
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One Voice Is Enough: Scorpio Music v. Willis and the Joint Author's Solo Termination
A Southern District of California ruling held that a co-author of 'Y.M.C.A.' who separately granted away his share could terminate that grant alone, without his co-writers' consent.
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Stanford v. Roche: Bayh-Dole Did Not Move Title Away From the Inventor
The Supreme Court held that the Bayh-Dole Act does not automatically vest patent rights in a federally funded university — title still begins with the inventor, and a stray 'do hereby assign' can send it elsewhere.
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Suprema v. ITC: How Induced Infringement Became an Import Violation
Sitting en banc, the Federal Circuit held that the ITC may bar imports used to induce infringement of a method claim performed only after the goods cross the border.
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The Knowledge Line: Tiffany v. eBay and the Limits of Marketplace Liability
The Second Circuit held that an online marketplace is contributorily liable for counterfeit sales only when it knows of specific infringing listings—not because counterfeiting is rampant on its platform generally.
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Convolve v. Compaq: When the NDA's Own Marking Rules Defeat the Secret
The Federal Circuit held that a disclosing party who ignored its NDA's written-designation protocol lost trade-secret protection at the moment of disclosure.
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When the Avatar Is You: Lohan v. Take-Two and the Recognizability Line
New York's highest court held that a video-game avatar can be a 'portrait' under the right of publicity, but only if the public can actually recognize the plaintiff in it.
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Microsoft v. AT&T: When Software Crosses the Border but the Patent Statute Does Not
The Supreme Court holds that supplying a master disk of software from the United States, then copying it abroad, does not 'supply' the patented invention's components under §271(f).
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The Whole Act: Zacchini and the Supreme Court's Only Right-of-Publicity Ruling
When a TV station aired a human cannonball's entire fifteen-second performance, the Supreme Court held the First Amendment does not immunize broadcasting a performer's complete act.
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Bilski v. Kappos: When the Machine-or-Transformation Test Became a Clue, Not a Rule
The Supreme Court rejected hedging as an unpatentable abstract idea while refusing to make the machine-or-transformation test the exclusive gatekeeper for process patents.
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Brenner v. Manson: Why a Patent Is Not a Hunting License
The Supreme Court held that a novel process for making a chemical with no known use fails the utility requirement, planting the doctrinal seed of 'substantial' utility that still governs the chemical and biotech arts.
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Parody Earns Its Keep: Campbell v. Acuff-Rose and the Birth of Transformative Fair Use
How the Supreme Court rescued 2 Live Crew's send-up of 'Oh, Pretty Woman' and rewrote the four-factor fair-use test around transformation.
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"Here's Johnny" on a Portable Toilet: Carson and the Catchphrase as Identity
The Sixth Circuit held that a celebrity's signature catchphrase can be appropriated even when his name and likeness are never used.
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The Garage-Door Case That Tethered the DMCA to Infringement: Chamberlain v. Skylink
The Federal Circuit refused to let a copyright owner use § 1201 as a tool to lock out an aftermarket competitor, holding that anti-circumvention liability requires a nexus to actual copyright infringement.
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Dastar v. Twentieth Century Fox: Who Counts as the 'Origin' of Goods Under Section 43(a)
The Supreme Court held that 'origin of goods' in the Lanham Act means the producer of the tangible product sold, not the author of the ideas it embodies — sharply narrowing reverse passing off.
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Dawn Donut v. Hart's Food: The Registrant Who Won the Mark but Lost the Injunction
The Second Circuit's foundational concurrent-use decision held that a federal registrant cannot enjoin a good-faith remote junior user until it is likely to expand into that user's trading area — a rule that still shapes every trademark clearance opinion.
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To the Batmobile: How DC Comics v. Towle Made a Car a Copyrightable Character
The Ninth Circuit held that the Batmobile is a copyrightable character, building a three-part test that now governs character protection for film and television.
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Factors Etc. v. Pro Arts: When an Exclusive Elvis License Outlived the Right It Licensed
The Second Circuit first upheld, then withdrew, an exclusive licensee's power to enforce Elvis Presley's posthumous identity — a whiplash that exposed how fragile a celebrity-estate license is when the underlying right depends on an unsettled state law.
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Originality Over Effort: Feist v. Rural and the Constitutional Floor for Copyright
In Feist Publications v. Rural Telephone Service (1991), the Supreme Court held that a garden-variety white-pages directory lacked the 'modicum of creativity' the Constitution requires, burying the 'sweat of the brow' doctrine for good.
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The Flexible Bar Survives: Festo v. Shoketsu Kinzoku and the Limits of Estoppel
The Supreme Court rejected an absolute bar on equivalents after a narrowing amendment, replacing it with a rebuttable presumption that still governs the doctrine of equivalents today.
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Gorham v. White: The 1871 Decision That Still Decides Design-Patent Infringement
In the first design-patent case it ever heard, the Supreme Court rejected an expert-eye comparison and adopted the ordinary-observer test that still governs infringement more than 150 years later.
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Idenix v. Gilead: How a $2.54 Billion Verdict Collapsed on Enablement
The Federal Circuit erased the largest patent verdict in U.S. history, holding that a functional nucleoside genus spanning billions of candidate molecules was neither enabled nor adequately described.
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The Death of the 'Should Have Known' Standard: In re Bose and Fraud on the PTO
The Federal Circuit reset the bar for fraud on the Trademark Office, holding that a registration falls only on clear and convincing proof of a subjective intent to deceive.
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Corn in the Mainstream Patent System: J.E.M. Ag Supply v. Pioneer Hi-Bred and the Utility Patent for Plants
The Supreme Court held that ordinary utility patents are available for plants, and that neither the Plant Patent Act nor the Plant Variety Protection Act is the exclusive route to protecting a new variety.
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Kirtsaeng v. Wiley: How 'Objective Reasonableness' Anchors Copyright Fee-Shifting
On the second trip to the Supreme Court, Kirtsaeng resolved how district courts should weigh a losing party's litigating position when awarding attorneys' fees under § 505 of the Copyright Act.
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Kirtsaeng v. Wiley: First Sale Goes Global and the Gray Market Comes Home
The Supreme Court read 'lawfully made under this title' geographically neutral, holding that § 109's first-sale doctrine exhausts the distribution right in copies manufactured abroad.
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KSR v. Teleflex: The Day the Rigid Obviousness Test Died
The Supreme Court replaced the Federal Circuit's mechanical teaching-suggestion-motivation test with a flexible, common-sense obviousness inquiry that still governs every Section 103 dispute today.
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Dracula Dies With the Actor: Lugosi v. Universal and the Birth of the Descendibility Debate
How the California Supreme Court held in 1979 that the right of publicity is personal, dies with its owner, and is not descendible to heirs—prompting the statute that overturned it.
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Who Reads the Claim: Markman v. Westview Instruments and the Birth of the Markman Hearing
The Supreme Court held that construing a patent claim is a question for the judge, not the jury—reshaping how every patent case is tried.
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Matal v. Tam: Why the Lanham Act Cannot Punish a Band Called The Slants
A unanimous Supreme Court held that trademarks are private speech and that the disparagement clause was viewpoint discrimination the First Amendment forbids — even when the speaker is reclaiming a slur.
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Oil States v. Greene's Energy: Why the Supreme Court Let the PTAB Cancel Patents
The Supreme Court held that inter partes review does not violate Article III or the Seventh Amendment because a patent is a public right the agency may reconsider.
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Interoperability Is Not Infringement: The Ninth Circuit Rewires Derivative-Works Law in Oracle v. Rimini Street
The Ninth Circuit's December 2024 decision holds that software built to interoperate with a copyrighted program is not a derivative work without 'something more' — actual copying of protected expression.
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Person's Co. v. Christman: Foreign Use, U.S. Priority, and the Limits of Bad Faith
The Federal Circuit holds that use of a mark abroad creates no priority in the United States, and that knowledge of a foreign mark does not by itself defeat good-faith domestic adoption.
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Pfaff v. Wells Electronics: When an Idea Becomes 'Ready for Patenting'
The Supreme Court replaced the Federal Circuit's vague 'substantially complete' standard with a two-part on-sale-bar test that can start the clock before a prototype ever exists.
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A Shade of Green-Gold: Qualitex v. Jacobson and the Trademarking of Color Alone
A unanimous Supreme Court held that a single color can serve as a trademark once it acquires secondary meaning, while making functionality the gatekeeper that keeps color from becoming a competitive chokehold.
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Sandoz v. Amgen: The Patent Dance Is a Choice, Not a Command
The Supreme Court's first reading of the biosimilars statute held that the BPCIA's elaborate pre-litigation information exchange cannot be forced by federal injunction, and that a biosimilar applicant may give its marketing notice before the FDA licenses the product.
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Steele v. Bulova Watch Co.: The Lanham Act Follows the Citizen Across the Border
The 1952 decision that first let an American trademark owner reach a U.S. citizen's infringing conduct abroad — and seeded seven decades of doctrinal fights over the foreign reach of the Lanham Act.
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Raising the Bar: Therasense v. Becton, Dickinson and the New Inequitable-Conduct Standard
The en banc Federal Circuit rebuilt the inequitable-conduct doctrine around but-for materiality and specific intent to deceive, narrowing the 'plague' of unenforceability defenses.