This week in Other Barks and Bites: Members of Congress ask the Government Accountability Office to conduct a study into the impact of President Biden’s proposed framework for exercising march-in rights under the Bayh-Dole Act; the U.S. Supreme Court rules “there is no time limit on monetary recovery” in copyright cases with expired statute of limitations; the Port of Oakland files a countersuit against San Francisco in airport naming dispute; and the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office warns 14,000 trademark filers of address leak.
Recent Posts
- Other Barks & Bites for Friday, June 20: Advocate General Tells CJEU to Affirm €4 Billion Antitrust Fine Against Google; Recentive Challenges Section 101 Invalidation of Machine Learning Claims
- Stewart Expands on ‘Settled Expectations’ Criteria in Interim Discretionary Denial Process
- Mediocre Results so Far for Deferred Subject Matter Eligibility Response Pilot
- European Patent Organization: Responses from ChatGPT Do Not Represent the “Understanding of a Skilled Person”
- Blackburn and Hirono Sign on to PERA 2025