LexisNexis convinced a US appeals court to uphold a ruling against patent owner Realtime Tracker, affirming that its innovations in lawyer time tracking were unpatentable less than a week after hearing oral arguments on the case https://t.co/EMmdI96tXO https://t.co/Xw3yayAxJA
Nokia, represented by @AlstonBirdLLP, beat back a nonpracticing entity's sought $35 million infringement case related to network technology patents. Read the story from reporter Adolfo Pesquera here: https://t.co/mG4KCaT1WH https://t.co/ZotdIET0n5
The Federal Circuit won't undo a New York federal judge's finding that a Realtime Tracker Inc. patent for tracking billable hours was invalid as an abstract idea, backing a win for LexisNexis parent company RELX. https://t.co/b7Xbicpa0c https://t.co/ZcxL2ssC9P
GeoComply has once again failed to persuade a court regarding the validity of its geolocation patent, which has been deemed overly broad. Meanwhile, LexisNexis successfully upheld a court ruling against Realtime Tracker Inc., which had accused the company of infringing a patent related to tracking lawyers' billable hours. The Federal Circuit supported a New York federal judge's decision that the Realtime Tracker patent was invalid as it constituted an abstract idea. This ruling marks a significant victory for LexisNexis's parent company, RELX, occurring shortly after oral arguments were heard in the case. In a separate legal matter, Nokia successfully defended against a $35 million infringement claim from a nonpracticing entity concerning network technology patents, with representation from Alston & Bird LLP.