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SoundExchange Counsel Faces Royalty SkirmishesEntertainment Law & FinanceSoundExchange, originated as a division of the RIAA and was spun off as a separate group in 2000 to collect and distribute digital performance royalties, is the only agency authorized to do so. Michael Huppe, general counsel for SoundExchange, says music labels and artists will increasingly depend on the performance royalties SoundExchange distributes to survive.
e-Discovery Compliance: Using Technology for Keyword Transparency and DefensibilityLJN's Legal Tech NewsletterWith the recent decision in Victor Stanley v. Creative Pipe, corporations and law firms need to be concerned about ensuring that proper searching is done on electronically stored information more than ever before. However, most e-discovery software today, designed for processing and/or review, was designed more for enterprise search rather than for the specific use as an electronic discovery search tool.
Harry Potter Decision Provides Guidance on Fair UseThe Intellectual Property StrategistIn Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. v. RDR Books, the Southern District of New York addressed the issue of when a reference guide constitutes a fair use.
The Threat of Evidence DestructionPatent Strategy & ManagementIn high-technology disputes, a patentee must secure a thorough understanding of often complex and subtle technologies in accused devices to prove patent infringement. Despite a patentees best efforts to obtain proof of infringement, very often the most convincing evidence of patent infringement for example, proprietary design documents of the accused device lies within the possession of the alleged infringer itself.
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Headlines
e-Curing the Holiday HumbugAnyone trying to keep an e-commerce site afloat didnt and still doesnt need to read the newspaper to realize the business downturn: the grim news appears every day in the cash till, in the aging-of-receivables report, and in overdue payables. While the down times are as inevitable a part of a business cycle as the booming times, that realization doesnt satisfy the bank, the critical vendor at the door or the payroll processor that must be paid.
Google: Done Paying Valleys Legal BillsFor most of the decade, Silicon Valley technology startups have assumed that Google would pay their legal bills by taking on the big, high-profile cases that would set precedents upon which all disruptive innovators could rely. Well, Google just put the Valley on notice that the free ride is over, which means more legal burdens for smaller technology companies that previously depended on Google clearing a path for them.
Web 2.0: Dont Miss the Big PictureWeb 2.0 is more than merely an upgrade of Web 1.0; rather, it is an evolutionary step toward a major change to the practice of law. The fact is that law firms spend the bulk of their fixed overhead in two areas: office space and personnel. One of these expenses, office space, can be dramatically reduced today; and personnel costs, especially on the support side, can be reduced today and dramatically reduced in just one more generation.
Technology in Marketing: Managing and Monitoring Your Law Firms Reputation OnlineWhile the issue of online reputation is relevant to both law firms and individual attorneys, in this article we focus on tips and strategies for monitoring, managing, and maximizing a law firms online reputation.
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