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Legal Technology Center - Software

Software | E-Discovery | Hardware | Communications | Networking & Storage
Over 1,000 Cases Now Included in K&L Gates' E-Discovery Case Database
Electronic Discovery Law, 07/03/08
We are pleased to announce that our searchable case database now contains over 1,000 e-discovery cases from state and federal jurisdictions, with new cases being added every week. Now more than ever, our database is an excellent source of information on developing e-discovery case law around the country.

Remove Hidden Metadata from Word Documents
TechnoEsq, 07/02/08
Unfortunately, metadata has curtailed one of the courtesies attorneys in litigation formerly exhibited through providing discovery requests in an electronic format so that opposing counsel didn’t have to have his assistant re-type your requests when answering discovery.

Is E-Mail Evidence Less Persuasive?
EDD Update, 06/20/08
I suppose it says something about your status in life if you are pleased or appalled to see Wall Street titans with eight-figure incomes taken away in handcuffs and booked. It's a bit like the lawyers in Qualcomm v Broadcom: we can identify with them until the lying starts, and then we no longer see ourselves in their moccasins.
Patent and Trademark Management
  • Uh Oh, Google Gets Geico: No Insurance Against Trademark Keying Policy (January 01, 2005)

    Jason Allen Cody of FindLaw

    "Following a three day trial, a recent decision by the Eastern District of Virginia gave new life to the practice of trademark keying. In Geico v. Google (No. 1:04CV507), Judge Brinkema ruled from the bench that Geico ""has not established that the mere use of [Geico's] trademark by Google as a search word or keyword or even using it in [Google's] AdWord program standing alone violates the Lanham Act."""
  • Interview With EFF Counsel Fred von Lohmann (May 01, 2003)

    Andrew Zangrilli of FindLaw

    Fred von Lohmann is a senior staff attorney with the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) specializing in intellectual property issues. In that role, he has represented programmers, technology innovators, and individuals in litigation against every major record label, movie studio, and television network (as well as several cable TV networks and music publishers) in the United States.
  • UPDATE on Personal Jurisdiction and the Web (August 01, 2097)

    Marie D'Amico of Digital Media

    "On April 9, 1997, the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in New York affirmed a dismissal (pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(2), lack of personal jurisdiction), against Bensusan Restaurant Corporation (""Bensusan""), operators in New York City, of a famous jazz club called ""The Blue Note"" against Richard B. King (""King""), a Missouri resident, who owns a club in Columbia, Missouri also called ""The Blue Note."""
  • Jurisdiction in a World Without Walls (May 01, 2097)

    Marie D'Amico of Digital Media

    Suppose you want to sue someone based upon their electronic action, for example, you allege their domain name infringes your trademark. Where do you go? Their home state, your home state, some central cyberspace locale? Can current caselaw concerning jurisdiction cope with a world without walls? Or, must the courts craft new caselaw to govern cyberspace?
  • Playing Music on the Net (March 01, 2097)

    Marie D¿Amico of NetGuide Magazine

    The net is the newest avenue for emerging and established recording artists to deliver their product to the public. Most major music publishers and a slew of startups have built Internet-based radio stations which play pre-chosen channels of music (pop, rhythm & blues, rap) or specific songs users select.
  • Licensing Interactive Music Rights (January 01, 2097)

    Marie D¿Amico of NetGuide Magazine

    You've designed a spiffy multimedia title with haunting graphics and a plot worthy of Dashiell Hammett. All that remains, besides beta-testing and printing the t-shirts, is a Grammy award-winning soundtrack.
  • WIPO Proposals: What Me Worry? (January 01, 2097)

    Marie D'Amico of Digital Media

    Between December 2nd and 20th, delegates from the member States of the World Intellectual Property Organization ( WIPO ) convened to consider certain conventions concerning copyright in the Internet Age.
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