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Articles Posted in Trademark and Copyright Litigation

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Sparrow Clips Wins Copyright Suit — Chicago Copyright Attorneys — Chicago Trade Secret Lawyers

Value stores like Meijer and T.J. Maxx, which have built a reputation for providing discounted items, allegedly don’t always use the best business practices for attaining those items. Many of them are sourced from outside the U.S., where labor is cheap, and allegedly sometimes they resort to knockoffs, which are…

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Copyright Suits Filed For Using Memes — Chicago Trademark and Copyright Lawyers

Most people who are active on the internet are accustomed to seeing many different memes on a daily basis. People take famous photos or freeze frames from movies, attach their own funny and/or enlightening quotes to them and post them on the internet. Some of these memes go viral and…

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Trader Joe’s Can Pursue Canadian Retailer for Trademark Infringement — Chicago Trademark Infringement Lawyers

Trademarks can be trickier than a lot of people realize. Although it would be wonderful to simply tell the government you’re trademarking something and rest assured that it will be protected from that point on, the realities of applying for and protecting one’s trademark status are much more blurry. This…

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Quicken Confidentiality Agreement Found to Interfere With Certain Important Employee Rights

Mortgage loan servicer Quicken Loans Inc. ran afoul of the National Labor Relations Act when it adopted a policy prohibiting its mortgage bankers from using or disclosing personnel information or publicly criticizing the company. That was the ruling of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit…

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Illinois Court to Try Case Where the Artist Himself Denies That He is the Painter — Chicago Copyright Lawsuit Attorneys

Many of us have heard of art historians debating whether a new-found painting was created by a certain artist, but it’s much more rare to hear of such a debate over a painting allegedly created by an artist who’s still living. Even more rare is the owner of a painting…

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Led Zeppelin Wins Stairway to Heaven Copyright Dispute

It’s common to hear artists talk about their work as being an homage to the work of another artist they admire or someone they once worked with, but sometimes the line between being influenced by an artist and stealing from that artist can get pretty blurry. Randy Wolfe was a…

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Oracle and Google Trial Continues with Testimony for the Key Witnesses — Chicago Trade Secret Lawyer

Some people claim that nothing is unique. That everything we come up with has already been done by many others and will be done again. But there’s a difference between great minds think alike and someone repeating something they’ve seen someone else do. Copyright law exists to protect creative ventures…

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University of Kentucky Tries to Stop Use of Kentucky On Bourbon Makers Hats and T-Shirts

Sports teams often make more money from the merchandise and apparel they sell, stamped with the team name and logo, than they do tickets to games. As a result, it makes sense that they have a vested interest in protecting the right to put their name and logo on clothing…

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Stairway to Heaven Copyright Suit Moves Forward to Trial

It’s a story that never gets old: the small-town attorney goes after the massive corporation. Only in this case, the massive corporation is the famous rock band Led Zeppelin. And the fight is over one of the most iconic songs of all time: Stairway to Heaven. According to the recent…

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NPR Reports: Lawsuit Will Decide Who Owns ‘Star Trek’ Language Klingon

Paramount Pictures holds the copyright to Klingon, spoken by some characters in “Star Trek.” A group called the Language Creation Society says that’s not right. The Hollywood Reporter says the group sued saying Klingon is a real language, Paramount can’t copyright it any more than it could English or Chinese.…

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