Search for: "Imagination Industries, Inc." Results 581 - 600 of 740
Sorted by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
17 Jan 2012, 8:17 am by Guest Author
Bollinger), an approach that it is difficult to imagine Justice Alito joining there. [read post]
8 Dec 2009, 1:43 pm by WIMS
Waste Information & Management Services, Inc. [read post]
9 May 2022, 7:24 am by Dan Farber
In South-Central Timber Development, Inc. v. [read post]
21 Jul 2021, 8:50 am by LII Team
Masters of Engineering Students Continue to Imagine Future Possibilities. [read post]
12 Oct 2020, 8:44 am by Eric Goldman
Imagine what this would look like: a flood of notices to the DOJ, many of which would be legally inconsequential, and all of which the DOJ would have to sort through. [read post]
6 Mar 2012, 7:45 am by Dennis Crouch
  As one might imagine, the actual scope and contours of FRAND licenses have puzzled lawyers, regulators and courts for years, and past efforts at clarification have never been very successful. [read post]
16 Aug 2022, 6:24 am by Richard Hunt
California’s ADA litigation industry relies more on the threat of costly litigation than on the reality of winning and losing so until making a threat is sanctionable (which will require that the California Supreme Court speak) they probably won’t slow down. [read post]
28 Jul 2015, 7:21 am by Kevin Goldberg
Judge Wu was similarly unimpressed by the ivi, Inc. decisions from the Second Circuit. [read post]
2 Jun 2022, 10:39 am by Aaron Moss
When lighting technician Blake Farmer got a tattoo of Miles Davis from celebrity tattoo artist Kat Von D in 2017, he never could have imagined that the image on his right arm would one day become Exhibit A in a copyright infringement lawsuit. [read post]
20 Aug 2022, 2:43 pm by Eugene Volokh
What's new here is not the law, but the behavior of industry. [read post]
9 May 2022, 8:51 am by William C. MacLeod
” Referring to the now-defunct Interstate Commerce Commission and Civil Aeronautics Board, she noted “the disastrous regulatory frameworks in the transportation industry teach the attentive student that rules stifle innovation, increase costs, raise prices, limit choice, and decrease output, frequently harming the very parties they are intended to benefit, and the benefits that flowed to consumers when competition replaced regulation in transportation. [read post]
4 Aug 2019, 10:03 pm by Chris Castle
 These fixes sound in our experience in regulating the tobacco industry, or “Big Tobacco. [read post]