
"Bites (noun): more meaty news to sink your teeth into. Barks (noun): peripheral noise worth your attention. Want to have your doggie(s) featured in one of our future Barks & Bites Columns? Send your dogs photo(s) along with their name, breed (if you know it) and their age to [email protected] . All photos will be added to the IPWatchdog Dog Wall at IPWatchdog Studios and will be added to the queue of images we select from each week."
"This week in Other Barks & Bites: the First Circuit rules that some Lanham Act claims over the use of Roberto Clemente's likeness in license plates can proceed against Puerto Rican government officials in their personal capacity; a petition for writ filed by USAA to challenge the Federal Circuit's application of Section 101 is distributed for conference at the U.S. Supreme Court; the TRAIN Act is introduced into the U.S. House of Representatives to give copyright owners the right to subpoena records for generative AI training;"
The First Circuit allowed certain Lanham Act claims over use of Roberto Clemente's likeness on license plates to proceed against Puerto Rican officials in their personal capacities. A USAA petition challenging the Federal Circuit's application of Section 101 was distributed for conference at the U.S. Supreme Court. Representatives introduced the TRAIN Act to grant copyright owners the ability to subpoena records used for generative AI training. Intel issued weak first-quarter guidance citing supply constraints. The USPTO extended the Patent Prosecution Highway program with other IP5 offices. The FTC filed a notice of appeal after an unsuccessful antitrust suit against Meta. The Fifth Circuit held that trade-secret plaintiffs must apportion damages to exclude product value not attributable to the misappropriated secrets.
Read at IPWatchdog.com | Patents & Intellectual Property Law
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