This week in Other Barks & Bites: the Senate approves a motion to advance a beefed-up version of the Creating Helpful Incentives to Produce Semiconductors Act; the Tenth Circuit affirms a $2.35 million judgment in a case involving trade secret and false association claims in the bovine serum industry; Senator Roger Wicker (R-MS) questions the business ties between President Biden’s nominee for OSTP Director and former Google CEO Eric Schmidt; the Copyright Office liberalizes the requirements for filing deposit copies to register single issues of serial publications; the Administrative Conference of the United States extends the public comment period on the agency’s small claims patent court study; the Third Circuit rules that Hatch-Waxman litigation filed by AbbVie and Abbott cannot support antitrust claims by generic drugmaker Perrigo; and Amazon.com makes a major push into virtual healthcare with a $3.9 billion acquisition of One Medical.
Patent
- Enablement
- Fee Shifting
- Litigation
- What I’ll Be Watching for in the Amgen Oral Arguments
- A Dog’s Day in Court: Implications of the ‘Bad Spaniels’ Arguments on Parody Determinations and Noncommercial Use
- Other Barks & Bites for Friday, March 24: Non-DOCX Fee Delayed Further; SCOTUS Petition Says Hirshfeld’s Review of PTAB Decision Violated Federal Vacancies Reform Act; Moderna CEO Grilled by Senate Committee over COVID Vaccine Price Hike
- Bayh-Dole Opponents Slam-Dunked Once Again
- SCOTUS Skeptical that Bad Spaniels is Parody, But Questions Need to Overturn Rogers
Recent Posts
- What I’ll Be Watching for in the Amgen Oral Arguments
- A Dog’s Day in Court: Implications of the ‘Bad Spaniels’ Arguments on Parody Determinations and Noncommercial Use
- Other Barks & Bites for Friday, March 24: Non-DOCX Fee Delayed Further; SCOTUS Petition Says Hirshfeld’s Review of PTAB Decision Violated Federal Vacancies Reform Act; Moderna CEO Grilled by Senate Committee over COVID Vaccine Price Hike
- Bayh-Dole Opponents Slam-Dunked Once Again
- SCOTUS Skeptical that Bad Spaniels is Parody, But Questions Need to Overturn Rogers