
"Broadcom announces a $10 billion AI chip order from an unnamed customer; the European General Court dismisses an action attempting to annul the new U.S.-EU personal data transfer framework established following Schrems II; the Senate Science Subcommittee will convene a hearing next week on America's action plan for artificial intelligence; the Federal Trade Commission issues a request for information and new nonenforcement consent orders targeting employer noncompete agreements; the Third Circuit affirms the voluntary nature of the Medicare Price Negotiation Program over a dissent by Circuit Judge Hardiman; and Google faces a $425.7 million jury verdict for data privacy violations and is separately ordered to release search engine result data to competitors by a U.S. district judge."
"FTC Issues RFI on Noncompetes, Orders Pet Cremation Business to Stop Enforcing Existing Agreements - On Thursday, September 4, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) announced that the agency had issued a request for information (RFI) soliciting public comments on the scope, prevalence and impacts of employer noncompete agreements during a 60-day public comment window that will end on November 3. The same day, the FTC also announced that it had instituted an enforcement proceeding under Section 5 of the FTC Act ( 15 U.S.C. § 4"
IPWatchdog invites dog photos for its Dog Wall at IPWatchdog Studios and will select images for future Barks & Bites columns. Professional employee unions for the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and the National Weather Service sued the Trump Administration over terminated collective bargaining agreements. Broadcom secured a reported $10 billion AI chip order from an unnamed buyer. The European General Court dismissed an attempt to annul the new U.S.-EU personal data transfer framework established after Schrems II. The Senate Science Subcommittee will hold a hearing on the national AI action plan. The FTC issued an RFI on noncompetes and initiated enforcement actions. The Third Circuit upheld that the Medicare Price Negotiation Program is voluntary despite a dissent. A jury awarded $425.7 million against Google for data privacy violations, and a U.S. district judge ordered Google to release search result data to competitors.
Read at IPWatchdog.com | Patents & Intellectual Property Law
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