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October 06, 2025
Artists Want Google To Produce AI Datasets In Copyright Suit
Artists and writers accusing Google of infringing their copyrights to train its artificial intelligence models asked a California federal judge to order the tech giant to produce certain datasets the plaintiffs believe contain their work, while Google has argued the request is "yet another sideshow" seeking irrelevant information.
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October 06, 2025
Music Publishers Can Pursue Copyright Suit Against Anthropic
Music publishers accusing Anthropic of using their songs' lyrics to train its artificial intelligence chatbot can pursue previously dismissed copyright claims, after a California federal judge said Monday that their updated complaint plausibly alleges that Anthropic knew people were using its AI system to create song lyrics.
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October 06, 2025
Meta Accused Of Retaliation In Pregnancy Discrimination Suit
A former manager for Meta claims in a lawsuit filed in California federal court Friday that the company discriminated against her for pregnancy-related leave, giving her unfair reviews and overloading her with work before firing her weeks after she reported bias to the human resources department.
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October 06, 2025
Justices Deny Cert. In Uber Wrongful Death, Sex Assault Suits
The U.S. Supreme Court Monday denied Uber's petition for review of two Ninth Circuit rulings holding it had a duty of care, one in a wrongful death case brought by a murdered driver's family and the other from a woman who was sexually assaulted by a suspended driver.
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October 06, 2025
Cybertruck Design Trapped Rider In Flaming Wreck, Suit Says
The family of a college student who died while trapped in a Tesla Cybertruck has hit the electric-auto maker with a wrongful death lawsuit in California state court, alleging that Tesla knowingly kept Cybertrucks on the roads despite known risks of their allegedly defectively designed electric doors failing.
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October 06, 2025
Catching Up With Delaware's Chancery Court
Last week, the owner of the Kentucky Derby was hit with a suit accusing it of withholding escrow funds for environmental compliance violations owed under a 2022 deal with hospitality company Enchantment Holdings LLC.
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October 06, 2025
Squire Patton Brings On Stein Shostak Int'l Trade Pro In LA
Squire Patton Boggs LLP is expanding its international trade team, announcing Monday it is bringing in a Stein Shostak Shostak Pollack & O'Hara LLP trade law specialist, who was previously an attorney with U.S. Customs and Border Protection, as of counsel in its Los Angeles office.
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October 06, 2025
BBK Names First Female Managing Partner
Best Best & Krieger LLP announced Monday that it has named a new managing partner with the appointment of a longtime environmental and land use attorney to the role as the first woman to lead the firm in more than 130 years.
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October 06, 2025
High Court Won't Hear Case Over Starz Strip Club Show
A playwright on Monday lost her bid to have the U.S. Supreme Court consider reviving her claims that Starz Entertainment copied her stage musical for the strip club drama series "P-Valley."
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October 06, 2025
Justices Won't Review EFAA's Effect On Wage Claims
The U.S. Supreme Court rejected on Monday an invitation to consider whether the 3-year-old Ending Forced Arbitration of Sexual Assault and Sexual Harassment Act can also push workers' wage and hour claims into federal court.
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October 06, 2025
Buyers Launch False Ad Suit Over Trader Joe's Probiotics
Two buyers have hit Trader Joe's Co. with a proposed class action alleging that the store's probiotics products contain far fewer "good bacteria" than advertised, with less than 8 billion colony forming units rather than the 30 billion the store claims.
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October 06, 2025
Angels Owner Testifies Noise Issue Marred NYC Penthouse
Los Angeles Angels owner Arte Moreno testified Monday that he became "very concerned" about noise from a fire suppression system, as a Manhattan federal judge weighed his claim for the return of an $8.5 million deposit he made in a Park Avenue penthouse deal that never closed.
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October 06, 2025
Cooley Adds Life Sciences Trio From WilmerHale, Sidley
Cooley LLP announced Monday that it is boosting its life sciences bench with a bicoastal trio of partners from WilmerHale and Sidley Austin LLP.
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October 06, 2025
Longtime Wilson Sonsini Litigator Jumps To Baker McKenzie
Baker McKenzie announced Monday that it has added a partner from Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati PC, who has previously represented such high-profile clients as Google and Netflix, to enhance the firm's capacity to handle commercial disputes, especially in the technology sector.
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October 06, 2025
Ares Buys 49% Stake In $2.9B EDPR Energy Portfolio
Ares Management Corp. announced Monday that a fund managed by its Infrastructure Opportunities strategy has acquired a 49% stake in a renewable energy portfolio from Spain's EDP Renováveis SA, giving the portfolio a total estimated enterprise value of about $2.9 billion.
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October 06, 2025
Justices Won't Review Live Nation's Arbitration Terms
The U.S. Supreme Court refused Monday to grant Live Nation's request for clarity about whether federal arbitration law covers "alternative" forms of arbitration after the Ninth Circuit found Ticketmaster's consumer arbitration agreement cannot be enforced in an antitrust case.
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October 06, 2025
Justices Won't Hear Coinbase's Calif. Arbitration Challenge
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to take up a case from Coinbase over whether federal arbitration laws preempt a California high court precedent that enabled a group of users to keep the crypto exchange in court over claims it misrepresented the security of its platform.
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October 06, 2025
Justices Deny Certiorari In Auditor's $1.5M Retaliation Suit
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to hear Axos Bank's petition challenging a $1.5 million award to a former auditor who claimed he was fired for whistleblowing, rejecting a matter that concerns how companies defend against such retaliation claims.
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October 06, 2025
High Court Refuses To Review Revived SAP Tying Claims
The U.S. Supreme Court denied a request on Monday from German software giant SAP to review a ruling that revived Teradata's antitrust claims over the alleged tying of software and database products.
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October 06, 2025
Justices Won't Review Blacklisting Case Against LegitScript
The U.S. Supreme Court refused Monday to review a bid from LegitScript to duck an antitrust case accusing it of blacklisting a drug price checking website despite contentions that it facilitates illegal imports of prescription drugs.
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October 06, 2025
Justices Won't Hear Nissan Sunroof Defect Class Spat
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to take up Nissan North America Inc.'s bid to unravel certified classes of drivers alleging the automaker sold vehicles with defective panoramic sunroofs, a case that sought additional clarity on standards that might allow uninjured plaintiffs to pursue class claims against corporate defendants.
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October 06, 2025
Justices Deny 'Space Force' TM Appeal From IP Atty
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday skipped an appeal from an attorney who said a 2018 speech from President Donald Trump was the inspiration for his attempt to register "US Space Force" as a trademark.Â
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October 06, 2025
Justices Deny Aviation Co.'s Appeal Over TM Trial Rights
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday rejected an appeal from a personal aviation company that raised the question of whether parties in trademark infringement cases still have a right to a jury trial when seeking an accounting of profits as the monetary remedy rather than damages.
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October 06, 2025
Slack Investor Won't Get 2nd Shot Before High Court
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday turned away a Slack Technologies investor's petition for the justices to hear his fraud dispute for the second time in two years, leaving intact a Ninth Circuit ruling that the case against the messaging software company was impossible to salvage under the 2023 high court ruling.
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October 06, 2025
Supreme Court Rejects Wash. State Climate Law Challenge
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday rejected Ohio-based Invenergy Thermal LLC's challenge to Washington state's Climate Commitment Act, which the company alleged illegally favors in-state power providers.
Expert Analysis
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RI Menopause Law Brings New Considerations For Employers
Rhode Island becoming the first state to provide express antidiscrimination and accommodation protections for employees' menopause-related conditions may be a bellwether for similar protections in other jurisdictions, so employers should consider that while such benefits may improve recruitment and retention, complications may arise from voluntarily adding them, say attorneys at Proskauer.
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FTC, CoStar Cases Against Zillow May Have Broad Impact
Zillow's partnerships with Redfin and Realtor.com have recently triggered dual fronts of legal scrutiny — an antitrust inquiry from the Federal Trade Commission and a mass copyright infringement suit from CoStar — raising complex questions that reach beyond real estate, says Shubha Ghosh at Syracuse University College of Law.
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State Crypto Regs Diverge As Federal Framework Dawns
Following the Genius Act's passage, states like California, New York and Wyoming are racing to set new standards for crypto governance, creating both opportunity and risk for digital asset firms as innovation flourishes in some jurisdictions while costly friction emerges in others, say attorneys at Sheppard Mullin.
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How 2nd Circ. Cannabis Ruling Upends NY Licensing
A recent Second Circuit decision in Variscite NY Four v. New York, holding that New York's extra-priority cannabis licensing preference for applicants with in-state marijuana convictions violates the dormant commerce clause, underscores that state-legal cannabis markets remain subject to the same constitutional constraints as other economic markets, say attorneys at Harris Beach.
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Parenting Skills That Can Help Lawyers Thrive Professionally
As kids head back to school, the time is ripe for lawyers who are parents to consider how they can incorporate their parenting skills to build a deep, meaningful and sustainable legal practice, say attorneys at Alston & Bird.
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Class Actions At The Circuit Courts: September Lessons
In this month's review of class action appeals, Mitchell Engel at Shook Hardy discusses seven decisions pertaining to attorney fees in class action settlements, the predominance requirement in automobile insurance cases, how the no mootness exception applies if the named plaintiff is potentially subject to a strong individual defense, and more.
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Series
Teaching Trial Advocacy Makes Us Better Lawyers
Teaching trial advocacy skills to other lawyers makes us better litigators because it makes us question our default methods, connect to young attorneys with new perspectives and focus on the needs of the real people at the heart of every trial, say Reuben Guttman, Veronica Finkelstein and Joleen Youngers.
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9th Circ. Finding That NFTs Are Goods Will Change TM Law
The Ninth Circuit's recent ruling in Yuga Labs v. Ripps establishes that NFTs have real, commercial value under U.S. federal trademark law, a new legal precedent that may significantly influence intellectual property enforcement and marketplace policies regarding digital assets going forward, say attorneys at Wilson Elser.
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Series
Adapting To Private Practice: From Texas AUSA To BigLaw
As I learned when I transitioned from an assistant U.S. attorney to a BigLaw partner, the move from government to private practice is not without its hurdles, but it offers immense potential for growth and the opportunity to use highly transferable skills developed in public service, says Jeffery Vaden at Bracewell.
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Advice For 1st-Gen Lawyers Entering The Legal Profession
Nikki Hurtado at The Ferraro Law Firm tells her story of being a first-generation lawyer and how others who begin their professional journeys without the benefit of playbooks handed down by relatives can turn this disadvantage into their greatest strength.
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FTC Focus: When Green Goals And Antitrust Law Collide
A recently concluded Federal Trade Commission investigation has turned an emissions deal involving major U.S. heavy-duty truck manufacturers that was brokered by the California Air Resources Board into a cautionary tale about the potential for environmental agreements to run afoul of competition rules, say attorneys at Proskauer.
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How 9th Circ. Customs Ruling Is Affecting FCA Litigation
The Ninth Circuit’s recent Island Industries decision holding that the U.S. Court of International Trade doesn’t have exclusive jurisdiction over whistleblower suits involving import duties has set the stage for the False Claims Act to be a key weapon on the customs enforcement battlefield, say attorneys at Haynes Boone.
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Calif. Board's Financial-Grade Climate Standards Raise Stakes
After the California Air Resources Board's recent workshop, it is clear that the state's climate disclosure laws will be enforced with standards comparable to financial reporting — so companies should act now to implement assurance-grade systems, formalize governance responsibilities and coordinate reporting across their organizations, says Thierry Montoya at Frost Brown.
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9th Circ. Qualified Immunity Ruling May Limit Phone Searches
Though the Ninth Circuit affirmed police officers’ qualified immunity claims in Olson v. County of Grant earlier this year, it also established important Fourth Amendment precedent on the use of cellphone extractions that will apply more broadly in criminal investigations and prosecutions, say attorneys at The Norton Law Firm.
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Series
Coaching Cheerleading Makes Me A Better Lawyer
At first glance, cheerleading and litigation may seem like worlds apart, but both require precision, adaptability, leadership and the ability to stay composed under pressure — all of which have sharpened how I approach my work in the emotionally complex world of mass torts and personal injury, says Rashanda Bruce at Robins Kaplan.