Search for: "United States v. Ronald Like" Results 661 - 680 of 711
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2 May 2008, 7:00 am
Landmark IP implications for universities: University of Western Australia v Gray: (IPRoo), (Managing Intellectual Property), (The Age), The latest edition of US Trade Representative’s ‘Special 301 Report’: (Ars Technica), (Ars Technica), (IAM), (Intellectual Property Watch), (Patry Copyright Blog), (Managing Intellectual Property), (Patent Docs), (IP Law360), Court rejects RIAA ‘making available’ theory: Atlantic v Howell:… [read post]
11 Sep 2023, 7:55 am by Ben Sperry
As the Nobel laureate Ronald Coase taught us, in a world without transaction costs (or if such costs were sufficiently low), age-verification laws or obtaining verifiable parental consent wouldn’t matter. [read post]
11 Oct 2019, 7:12 am by Jay Pinho
(With the exception of a mid-September media law conference in central London featuring Justice Stephen Breyer, all other events we tracked this summer took place in the United States.) [read post]
25 Feb 2010, 7:57 am by Steve Hall
Such questions about jury instructions are an area of legal dispute that has bounced from state courts to the United States Supreme Court and back over the past 20 years. [read post]
25 Nov 2015, 9:45 am by Bill Otis
  With all we hear about the need to respect other countries and other value systems, these harsh though widely used alternatives to prison never seem to get brought up in the discussion of the supposed moral shortcomings of the incarceration-happy United States. [read post]
25 Apr 2017, 1:12 pm by Chris Castle
 All of the proxies started dancing (you can find most of them on the venerable Google Shill List from the Oracle v. [read post]
27 Jun 2007, 9:41 am
Frye, The Peculiar Story of United States v. [read post]
27 Mar 2008, 11:00 pm
It must be an account of why changes in constitutional doctrine over time- which largely occur outside of Article V amendment and are not in the control of any single person, much less any single judge- are legitimate. [read post]
31 Aug 2015, 10:50 am
As I’ve noted above, it’s perfectly conventional to refer to certain open-ended statutes—chiefly the Sherman Act, but also other statutes like the Alien Tort Statute and securities laws—as delegations to the judiciary. [read post]
10 Jul 2012, 2:11 am by Charon QC
But it’s the lawyers who are dominant in business in the United States*. [read post]
29 Mar 2023, 8:28 am by Eric Goldman
  But it was not a claim filed by Oppenheimer, but a claim referred to the CCB from the United States District Court for the Northern District of California. [read post]
10 May 2010, 2:52 pm by ALeonard
  In many respects, being on the Supreme Court is like being President of the United States. [read post]
28 Mar 2008, 6:00 am
You can separately subscribe to the IP Thinktank Global week in Review at the Subscribe page: [duncanbucknell.com] Highlights this week included:Forbes interview with M Meurer (co author of ‘Patent Failure’): (Patent Prospector), (IPBiz), (IPBiz), (IPBiz), (IAM), (Technological Innovation and Intellectual Property), (Patent Prospector),Rambus – Rambus stock soars following jury’s dismissal of antitrust and fraud charges from Hynix, Micron, and Nanya that… [read post]
20 Jul 2017, 11:00 am by Jane Chong
” The Constitution provides that the president, like the vice president and all civil officers of the United States, “shall be removed from Office on Impeachment for and Conviction of, Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors. [read post]
16 Jun 2010, 6:26 am by Jeff Gamso
  Not surprisingly, Macumber was convicted and sentenced to life.I don't know how many factually innocent people are in prison in the United States. [read post]