Search for: "Matter of Lassen" Results 21 - 29 of 29
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26 Nov 2020, 12:40 am by Florian Mueller
Theoretically, the court could also stay Huawei's case pending the resolution of today's referral, but that would not be a good idea given that there is a risk of Nokia getting leverage over Daimler in some case and coercing the Mercedes maker into a settlement, while Huawei would certainly see this matter through. [read post]
10 Jun 2017, 7:10 am by Peter A. Dutton, Isaac B. Kardon
Such operations uphold the U.S. position that the coastal state claim in question is excessive as a matter of international law (see Roach and Smith’s Excessive Maritime Claims for an authoritative discussion of which claims are deemed excessive and why). [read post]
14 Mar 2017, 12:00 am by Rick Klau
Length doesn't really matter: you're driving a big vehicle. [read post]
12 Aug 2020, 2:35 pm by Matthias Weller
Internationales Privat- und Verfahrensrecht sowie Völkerrecht Moritz BRINKMANN und Thomas VOGT GEISSE Qualifikation und Anknüpfung von Instrumenten der prozessvorbereitenden Aufklärung Eckart BRÖDERMANN Vom Drachen-steigen-Lassen – Ein internationales Jura-Märchen zum IPR/IZVR Hannah L. [read post]
7 Dec 2020, 12:39 am by Sander van Rijnswou
Thus, this decision is in no way a matter of a debit order submitted without comment, which the Board of Appeal considered an implicit request for correction. [read post]
3 May 2007, 10:20 am
It doesn't matter what the product is (it doesn't even have to be a product). [read post]
19 May 2017, 7:10 am by Nico Cordes
After T 910/03 it languished but occasionally reappeared.The Board refrains from referring the matter to the EBoA as it considers such referral not to be decisive in the present case, since according to the Board a same conclusion would be reached using both the essentiality test and the gold standard (being that the removal violates Art. 76(1) EPC).Entscheidungsgründe(...)2. [read post]
30 Dec 2018, 3:03 am by Ben
2018 was another busy busy year in the world of copyright, and a continuing global 'theme' was the ongoing battle between 'big tech' and 'big content', with the likes of Google and YouTube continuing to lobby extensively against planned reforms, bringing onboard (some) of the creative community - whilst the  'big content' (including film companies, music companies, the games sector and television) rolled out other creators - and finally seemed to be… [read post]