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The National Law Forum - Page 481 of 753 - Legal Updates. Legislative Analysis. Litigation News.

Supreme Court Calls Out the EEOC for Arguing It Alone Can Determine Whether It Followed the Law

We suggested last year that if you felt paranoid that the federal agencies seemed out to get employers, perhaps it was not paranoia at all. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s (EEOC) spate of recent lawsuits — or at least its apparent haste to sue employers and make examples out of them over such things as wellness programs (even before issuing proposed guidance on what was permissible relative to such well-intentioned programs) — clearly did not help with this concern. However, a decision by the Supreme Court last week tightened the reins on the EEOC and reminded it that, in seeking to pursue litigation against employers for violations of law, the Commission must follow the law itself and answer to claims that it has failed to do so.

Pursuant to Title VII, the EEOC must attempt to eliminate unlawful employment practices through “informal methods of conference, conciliation, and persuasion” before suing an employer for employment discrimination. Employers may feel this does not always happen because the EEOC has lately seemed more intent on filing suit (and getting press attention for its agenda…) than working things out. Consequently, employers assert they receive insufficient information from the EEOC and are forced to make a decision on a take-it-or-leave-it basis which, if wrong, can have costly consequences. The Commission has stood firm on its use of federal muscle by asserting the courts cannot review whether it has fulfilled its pre-suit conciliation obligation; only the EEOC can review whether the EEOC can do what the EEOC is supposed to do (which seems imminently fair, right?). The Supreme Court has just said otherwise.

The case arose from litigation filed by the EEOC in 2011 on behalf of a class of female applicants not hired by the employer as miners. The employer raised as a defense the argument that the EEOC had failed to conciliate in good faith prior to filing suit, based on two letters sent by the Commission. The first informed the employer that a finding of reasonable cause had been made and “[a] representative of this office will be in contact with each party in the near future to begin the conciliation process.” The second letter declared that conciliation had “occurred” and failed, though it appears that the EEOC’s actual conciliation efforts were thin at best.

The EEOC argued that its conciliation efforts were immune from court review and that, if the courts had the power to review such efforts, it could only review its actions based on the two letters. In response, the court noted the obvious point that without court review, “the Commission’s compliance with the law would rest in the Commission’s hands alone.” Justice Elena Kagan, writing for the court, also rejected the EEOC’s second argument, stating that “[c]ontrary to its intimation, those letters do not themselves fulfill the conciliation condition: The first declares only that the process will start soon, and the second only that it has concluded. . . . to treat the letters as sufficient — to take them at face value, as the Government wants — is simply to accept the EEOC’s say-so that it complied with the law.”

The court then instructed the EEOC on what it must do to follow Title VII: 1) give the employer notice of the “specific allegation,” including “what the employer has done and which employees (or class of employees) have suffered as a result”; and 2) “try to engage the employer in some form of discussion (written or oral), to give the employer an opportunity to remedy the allegedly discriminatory practice.” Justice Kagan then asserted that while judicial review is limited exclusively to whether or not the EEOC has fulfilled these requirements, if the employer provides credible evidence that the EEOC did not fulfill the requirements then a court must conduct the fact finding necessary to decide that limited dispute. If the evidence shows a failure to properly conciliate, the appropriate remedy is to order the EEOC to undertake the mandated efforts to obtain voluntary compliance. Accordingly, while stays of cases may be entered until the EEOC is given the opportunity to do what it was supposed to have done, it is unlikely that any case will be dismissed for failure to meet the pre-suit requirements.

This decision is absolutely a win for employers, as it calls the EEOC out for its improper use of federal muscle through litigation and make an example of an employer without first giving it a legitimate opportunity to assess its options. While the decision will not put employers in control, or even on equal standing, with the EEOC prior to suit, it does create leverage to insist the EEOC meet the minimum requirements. As a practical matter, this may cause the EEOC to be more forthcoming, and cooperative, at least when pressed. And employers should do exactly that if necessary and carefully document circumstances when it feels the EEOC has not done what it must.

Authored by: Gregory D Snell of Foley & Lardner LLP

© 2015 Foley & Lardner LLP

LinkedIn, the Fair Credit Reporting Act, and the Real-World Implications of Online Activity

With the ever-increasing amount of information available on social media, employers should remember to exercise caution when utilizing social media as a part of their Human Resources/ Recruitment related activities. We live in a digital-age, and how people choose to define themselves is often readily showcased on social networking sites. Whether – and how – employers choose to interact with the online presence of their workforce will continue to develop as the relevant legal standards try to catch up.

A recent federal court filing in the Northern District of California against LinkedIn Corp. provides yet another example of the growing interaction between online personas and real-world employment law implications. There, in Sweet, et al v. LinkedIn Corp., the plaintiffs sought to expand the application of the Fair Credit Reporting Act (“FCRA”) by alleging that LinkedIn’s practice of providing “reference reports” to members that subscribe to LinkedIn’s program for a fee, brought LinkedIn within the coverage of the FCRA as a Credit Reporting Agency (“CRA”). Briefly, the FCRA (and relevant state statutes like it) imposes specific requirements on an employer when working with “any person which, for monetary fees, dues, or on a cooperative nonprofit basis, regularly engages in whole or in part in the practice of assembling or evaluating consumer credit information or other information on consumers for the purpose of furnishing consumer reports to third parties, and which uses any means or facility of interstate commerce for the purpose of preparing or furnishing consumer reports.” In other words, there are rules – such as providing requisite disclosures and obtaining prior authorization – that apply when an employer engages a CRA to perform background checks, reference checks and related inquiries.

In the lawsuit, the plaintiffs alleged that LinkedIn was a CRA – and that these various rules should apply – because LinkedIn collected and distributed consumer information to third parties and the resulting reference reports “bear on a consumer’s character, general reputation, mode of living, or personal characteristics, and/or other factors listed in 15 U.S.C. § 1681a(d).” Further, according to the complaint, LinkedIn violated the FCRA because it should have provided FCRA compliant disclosure and followed the reporting obligations applicable to CRAs.

LinkedIn, which is touted as the “world’s largest professional network,” does not portray itself as a CRA and moved to dismiss the complaint. LinkedIn argued that the plaintiffs’ interpretation of the statute was too broad and, moreover, was inconsistent with the facts. A federal judge agreed and dismissed the complaint (although the plaintiffs have the opportunity to file another complaint). The Court ruled that these reference searches could not be considered “consumer reports” under the law – and LinkedIn was not acting as a CRA – because, in part, the plaintiffs had voluntarily provided their information to LinkedIn with the intention of it being published online. (The FCRA excludes from the definition of a consumer report a report that contains “information solely as to transactions or experiences between the consumer and the person making the report.”) The Court also noted that the allegations suggested that LinkedIn “gathers the information about the employment histories of the subjects of the Reference Searches not to make consumer reports but to ‘carry out consumers’ information-sharing objectives.’”

The LinkedIn case should still serve as a reminder of several important and interrelated trends. First, as it concerns the FCRA, the statute is broadly worded to cover “any written, oral or other communication of any information by a consumer reporting agency . . .” and the equally expansive definition of a CRA can apply in numerous situations that extend beyond the traditional notion of a consumer reporting agency. If applicable, the requirements of the FCRA must be followed. Second, employers need to continue to be mindful of the fact that their online activity can have real-world employment law implications. Third, as the law governing traditional employment law continues to evolve in response to online developments, the challenges to that activity will evolve as well.

Authored by: Ian Gabriel Nanos and Maxine Adams of Epstein Becker & Green, P.C.

©2015 Epstein Becker & Green, P.C. All rights reserved.

Three Tips for Better Law Firm Videos [PodCast]

Great overview of successful attorney videos by John McDougall of McDougall Interactive and Justin Parker and Jimmy Craig of MethodLoft in the podcast below.

https://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/203761369

John McDougall: Hi. I’m John McDougall. I’m here today with Justin Parker and Jimmy Craig of MethodLoft. Today, we’re going to be speaking about three tips for better law firm videos. Welcome, Jimmy and Justin.

Justin Parker: Hi. Good to be here.

Jimmy Craig: Good to be here.

John: Why is video important for attorneys?

Justin: There are a few factors there. One of the most important is that an attorney is — you’re not only selling services but you’re selling yourself. A video is a great way to let your client know who you are, what’s your body language, how do you talk, is someone going to be comfortable working with you? It’s much more personal than just seeing a stock photo or a still photo of you on the website.

John: Yeah, and too much text, which certainly people read a lot online but video is a booming trend for sure.

Justin: For sure. For a lot of attorneys, you could have a video that doesn’t need to have a lot of views, but one sale from 75 views is really a big deal and can make the whole project worthwhile.

John: And you’ve seen that happen?

Justin: Absolutely, yes.

Jimmy: It’s obviously important for attorneys to be present online. So having video is just a, what we think is a critical piece of that, especially now since videos show up in organic Google search results. Also, YouTube is the second biggest search engine. It’s good to take advantage of that.

John: What is typically wrong with lawyer videos?

Jimmy: I’d say, something we always encourage lawyers to avoid is being too sales y. Video is a really good opportunity to be more personable. Basically, just share knowledge that you already have and don’t try to be aggressive, and not sales y and not stiff.

Again, anytime we shoot a video, we really encourage lawyers to not even use a script. We’ll basically have a loose outline, but we really want them to basically just be them.

John: Yeah, a lot of times, they’re really wondering, “Who’s going to write the script, and how long is the script?” It’s a lot more likely you’ll get a less stiff take if you don’t do that, right?

Justin: Absolutely. A lot of attorney videos, you’re just seeing, like Jimmy said, “Come to our law firm because we do this.” That’s all we’re getting from them, and it’s just blending in with everybody else who does that as opposed to, “I’m just here to share my knowledge with you.” That is just a much better sales pitch, I think.

John: Yeah, so starting with the right approach, a good inbound marketing type of approach. What are the three tips to improve law firm websites using video?

Justin: One tip is just to make sure your production quality is decent. It doesn’t have to be like Hollywood extravaganza, but you probably you don’t want to shoot your videos with the webcam in your laptop. Also, a lot of people underestimate audio quality. That’s a big thing that goes into the whole production process.

John: How do they miss out on that, just using the mic that’s in the camera or is there a way to get around that?

Justin: Yeah. Different microphones are obviously going to have better quality even if they are on the camera, but you could have a boom mic that you can place right next to the subject. That’s definitely going to increase the quality. Just put it up on a little tripod. It’s not really a big deal, not a big setup.

John: Do you often can go into a separate MP3 recorder or…

Justin: Yeah, absolutely. That’s our current process, but that isn’t the only process. Sometimes, you can feed directly into the camera. It just depends on the equipment.

John: But that means you’re going to have to sync it somehow, right?

Justin: Yeah, absolutely.

John: But you think that’s worth doing?

Justin: Yeah, for sure. Again, audio quality, almost more important than video quality. They’re right there.

John: Interesting. What else?

Jimmy: Another tip, I’d say, is to be mindful of the length of the content you’re releasing. Typically, when we do an overview video for an attorney, which is basically their commercial to the world, we stick around one to two minutes, typically. We don’t really want to go too long.

We found that a lot of attorneys want to say everything they’ve done, the history of their firm, and how much money they’ve won, and how long they’ve been in the business and stuff. It’s really just highlight points. Basically, you want to think of it as, this is your bullet list. Again, people online don’t really have the longest attention spans, so we try to keep things under two minutes.

Also, for FAQ videos, that’s another thing we do with a lot of attorneys, and we keep those, typically, I’d say, under a minute, probably around 40 to 45 seconds.

John: With the overview videos, I think some of those value proposition statements, a little bit of, “How long have you been in business?” and some of those stuff is OK but as long as they can do it quick.

Jimmy: Of course. The thing is, that stuff is definitely important. It’s just, sometimes, you can get that across, too, with even a text bulleted list during the video while the attorney is saying something else, maybe talking about a specific case or something like that. Basically, you want to pack a lot of information into a short thing. But you don’t need to go into detail, basically.

Justin: Again, it depends on what kind of video you’re doing. There’s overview videos, and then there’s FAQ videos. With your overview video, maybe that’s more of an overview of your firm. An FAQ video, it’s just, here is a specific question, here is a specific answer.

So as a law firm or an attorney, you have a lot knowledge you want to share, and just figuring out which pieces of that knowledge fit into what kind of video you’re doing.

John: With the FAQ videos, it’s important to pick keywords. So you’ve seen good results with that as well.

Justin: Definitely, another tip that we would definitely recommend is using keywords, and then adding them to YouTube, and then transcribe the text of what you’re talking about in your video, and you can put that text directly into your website for SEO purposes and also take that text and import it into YouTube as the Closed Caption text. Those are other ways to be searchable for sure.

John: Those are great tips. Again, this is John McDougall with McDougall Interactive Marketing, here today with Jimmy Craig and Justin Parker of MethodLoft. See you next time. Thanks, guys.

Justin: Thank you.

© Copyright 2015 McDougall Interactive

Continue reading Three Tips for Better Law Firm Videos [PodCast]

Next Week! Join the ABA at their 9th Annual National Institute on E-Discovery – May 15th in New York City

ABA Nat Inst E Discov May 15

Remaining current is critical to successful litigation. This program is relevant for both in-house and outside counsel who are involved in litigation and the discovery process. E-Discovery is a rapidly evolving field with laws and regulations that are constantly changing.  Attendees of this program will gain practical knowledge that may be implemented immediately in day-to-day operations.

Additional Information Institute Brochure

  • Noted practitioners and jurists will address:
  • Practical tips for managing litigation holds
  • Preserving personal data devices in light of the varying interpretations of “possession, custody, and control”
  • Judges’ perspectives on the Proposed Federal Rule of Civil Procedure amendments
  • Recent court decisions, as reviewed by one of the industry’s leading authorities on E-Discovery case law
  • Meeting ethical obligations related to securing clients’ E-Discovery data
  • The unique aspects of cross-border E-Discovery between the U.S., and the European Union, Latin America, Asia-Pacific, and Canada

Register now!

Canada to Implement Electronic Travel Authorization System

Starting in March 2016, Canada will require individuals who may visit Canada without a visa to first obtain approval from its electronic travel authorization system (eTA). Visitors to the United States will recognize eTA as similar to the ESTA (Electronic System for Travel Authorization), which is used by the United States to pre-screen its visa-exempt visitors. Applicants will be able to use the eTA system starting Aug. 1, 2015.

The eTA will only be required for visa-exempt individuals seeking to travel to Canada by air for a short-term visit. Applicants must pay a CAD $7.00 processing fee and the resulting electronic travel authorization will be valid for five years or until the applicant’s passport expires, the eTA is cancelled, or a new eTA is issued. The eTA will include the applicant’s name, date, place of birth, gender, address, nationality, and passport information.

Notably, U.S. citizens are exempt from the eTA requirement, as are individuals who already have a Canadian visitor visa in their passport.

Authored by Rebecca Schechter of Greenberg Traurig

©2015 Greenberg Traurig, LLP. All rights reserved.

Data Breaches: Every Company Is at Risk – Part 1 – Cynthia Larose, Chair, Privacy & Security Practice [VIDEO]

Cynthia Larose of Mintz Levin’s Privacy & Security Practice, discusses the steps companies can take to prepare and protect themselves from a potential data breach in the following video:

http://www.mintz.com/videos/Data-Breaches-Every-Company-Is-at-Risk-Part-1

Cynthia is Chair of the firm’s Privacy & Security Practice and a Certified Information Privacy Professional (CIPP). She has extensive experience in privacy, data security, and information management matters, including state, federal, and international laws and regulations on the use and transfer of information, behavioral advertising, data security breach compliance and incident response, data breach incident response planning, as well as data transfers in the context of mergers and acquisitions and technology transactions.

©1994-2015 Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo, P.C. All Rights Reserved

Data Breaches: Every Company Is at Risk – Part 1 – Cynthia Larose, Chair, Privacy & Security Practice [VIDEO]

Cynthia Larose of Mintz Levin’s Privacy & Security Practice, discusses the steps companies can take to prepare and protect themselves from a potential data breach in the following video:

http://www.mintz.com/videos/Data-Breaches-Every-Company-Is-at-Risk-Part-1

Cynthia is Chair of the firm’s Privacy & Security Practice and a Certified Information Privacy Professional (CIPP). She has extensive experience in privacy, data security, and information management matters, including state, federal, and international laws and regulations on the use and transfer of information, behavioral advertising, data security breach compliance and incident response, data breach incident response planning, as well as data transfers in the context of mergers and acquisitions and technology transactions.

©1994-2015 Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo, P.C. All Rights Reserved

Supreme Court to Decide Who Can Sue Under Privacy Law

Does a consumer, as an individual, have standing to sue a consumer reporting agency for a “knowing violation” of the Fair Credit Reporting Act (“FCRA”), even if the individual may not have suffered any “actual damages”?

The question will be decided by the U.S. Supreme Court in Spokeo, Inc. v. Robins, 742 F.3d 409 (9th Cir. 2014), cert. granted, 2015 U.S. LEXIS 2947 (U.S. Apr. 27, 2015) (No. 13-1339). The Court’s decision will have far-reaching implications for suits under the FCRA and other statutes that regulate privacy and consumer credit information.

FCRA

Enacted in 1970, the Fair Credit Reporting Act obligates consumer reporting agencies to maintain procedures to assure the “maximum possible accuracy” of any consumer report it creates. Under the statute, consumer reporting agencies are persons who regularly engage “in the practice of assembling or evaluating consumer credit information or other information on consumers for the purpose of furnishing consumer reports to third parties.” Information about a consumer is considered to be a consumer report when a consumer reporting agency has communicated that information to another party and “is used or expected to be used or collected” for certain purposes, such as extending credit, underwriting insurance, or considering an applicant for employment. The information in a consumer report must relate to a “consumer’s credit worthiness, credit standing, credit capacity, character, general reputation, personal characteristics, or mode of living.”

Under the FCRA, consumers may bring a private cause of action for alleged violations of their FCRA rights resulting from a consumer reporting agency’s negligent or willful actions. For a negligent violation, the consumer may recover the actual damages he or she may have sustained. For a “willful” or “knowing” violation, a consumer may recover either actual damages or statutory monetary damages of $100 to $1,000.

Background

Spokeo is a website that aggregates personal data from public records that it sells for many purposes, including employment screening. The information provided on the site may include an individual’s contact information, age, address, income, credit status, ethnicity, religion, photographs, and social media use.

Spokeo, Inc., has the dubious distinction of receiving the first fine ($800,000) from the Federal Trade Commission (“FTC”) for FCRA violations involving the sale of Internet and social media data in the employment screening context. The FTC alleged that the company was a consumer reporting agency and that it failed to comply with the FCRA’s requirements when it marketed consumer information to companies in the human resources, background screening, and recruiting industries.

Conflict in Circuit Courts

In Robins v. Spokeo, Inc., Thomas Robins had alleged several FCRA violations, including the reckless production of false information to potential employers. Robins did not allege he had suffered or was about to suffer any actual or imminent harm resulting from the information that was produced, raising only the possibility of a future injury.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, based in San Francisco, held that allegations of willful FCRA violations are sufficient to confer Article III standing to sue upon a plaintiff who suffers no concrete harm, and who therefore could not otherwise invoke the jurisdiction of a federal court, by authorizing a private right of action based on a bare violation of the statute. In other words, the consumer need not allege any resulting damage caused by a violation; the “knowing violation” of a consumer’s FCRA rights alone, the Ninth Circuit held, injures the consumer. The Ninth Circuit’s holding is consistent with other circuits that have addressed the issue. See e.g., Beaudry v. TeleCheck Servs., Inc., 579 F.3d 702, 705-07 (6th Cir. 2009). It refused to follow the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit in finding that one “reasonable reading of the [FCRA] could still require proof of actual damages but simply substitute statutory rather than actual damages for the purpose of calculating the damage award.” Dowell v. Wells Fargo Bank, NA, 517 F.3d 1024, 1026 (8th Cir. 2008).

The constitutional question before the U.S. Supreme Court is the scope of Congress’ authority to confer Article III standing, particularly, whether a violation of consumers’ statutory rights under the FCRA are the type of injury for which Congress may create a private cause of action to redress. In Beaudry, the Sixth Circuit identified two limitations on Congress’ ability to confer standing:

  1. the plaintiff must be “among the injured,” and

  2. the statutory right must protect against harm to an individual rather than a collective.

The defendant companies in Beaudry provided check-verification services. They had failed to account for a change in the numbering system for Tennessee driver’s licenses. This led to reports incorrectly identifying consumers as first-time check-writers.

The Sixth Circuit did not require the plaintiffs in Beaudry to allege the consequential damages resulting from the incorrect information. Instead, it held that the FCRA “does not require a consumer to wait for consequential harm” (such as the denial of credit) before bringing suit under FCRA for failure to implement reasonable procedures in the preparation of consumer reports. The Ninth Circuit endorsed this position, holding that the other standing requirements of causation and redressability are satisfied “[w]hen the injury in fact is the violation of a statutory right that [is] inferred from the existence of a private cause of action.”

Authored by: Jason C. Gavejian and Tyler Philippi of Jackson Lewis P.C.

Jackson Lewis P.C. © 2015

FDA Finalizes Guidance Documents on Biosimilarity

On Tuesday, and over three years after the initial guidance documents were released, the US Food and Drug Administration released final versions of three guidance documents discussing how FDA will evaluate applications for regulatory approval of biosimilar products:

•Scientific Considerations in Demonstrating Biosimilarity to a Reference Product

•Quality Considerations in Demonstrating Biosimilarity of a Therapeutic Protein

•Questions and Answers Regarding Implementation of the Biologics Price Competition and Innovation Act of 2009

Draft versions of the guidance documents were originally released by FDA for public comment in February 2012. In general, the final versions released Tuesday track the draft versions fairly closely, with a few noteworthy differences.

The guidance documents reiterate that the FDA will use a totality of the evidence approach to review applications for biosimilar products, and encourages a stepwise approach to demonstrating biosimilarity which with rare exceptions will include a comparison of the proposed biosimilar product with the reference product in terms of structure, function, animal toxicity, human pharmacokinetics (PK) and pharmacodynamics (PD), clinical immunogenicity, and clinical safety and effectiveness. This stepwise approach is intended to better address residual uncertainty about biosimilarity that might remain at each step of the approval process.

The final guidance documents contain a few changes from the draft versions that are noteworthy:

•Most of the discussion of issues related to demonstrating the heightened standard for interchangeability was removed from the guidances with a note that it will be the subject of a separate guidance document that is forthcoming.

•The final guidances reiterate that, in most instances, a sponsor will need to provide information to demonstrate biosimilarity based on data directly comparing the proposed biosimilar product to FDA-approved reference product. However, they elaborate on the type of bridging data needed when a biosimilar applicant seeks to use a non-US licensed comparator product to support a demonstration of biosimilarity.

•Specific comments have been provided for biosimilar developers considering manufacturing/process changes after completing the initial analytical similarity assessment including a requirement to demonstrate comparability between the pre- and post-change proposed product.

•More detailed comments regarding animal toxicity studies were added.

•Previous Q and As relating to what constitutes the “publicly-available information” that should be included in a 351(k) application and whether an applicant can include a request for reference product exclusivity in its 351(a) application were deleted – an indication that the FDA is still considering its position on these points.

Authored by: Paul A. Calvo, Ph.D. and Timothy J. Shea, Jr., PhD. by Sterne Kessler

© 2015 Sterne Kessler

Last Week Tonight’ Host John Oliver Ignores the Last Three Years of Patent Reform

Have you seen John Oliver’s piece about abuses in the patent system? The ‘Last Week Tonight’ host has quite a bit of fun at the expense of the patent system.  He tossed out three primary complaints:

(A) patent owners that don’t practice their patents shouldn’t be able to assert them;

(B) patent owners enforcing their patents are extorting parties, including small businesses and end users, that lack the funds or capability to litigate; and

(C) patents, especially software patents, are too vague, resulting in uncertainty as to what products or actions are encompassed.

John Oliver is witty, dry, and often downright silly – and it is for those reasons that millions of people are drawn to his humor and his show.  For those of us inclined to think that America’s tradition of strong patent protection has led us to be the most innovative country in the world, this particular story drew our attention for different reasons. His reporting posited the idea that the Innovation Act, H.R. 9, working its way through the House of Representatives, would solve most of the problems he identified in our patent system.  Far from providing the solutions its proponents claim, that legislation would do little or nothing to limit the sending of bogus demand letters to unsophisticated targets in hopes of extracting nuisance value settlements – a practice that many decry as the most egregious example of patent abuse.  Further, Mr. Oliver seems unaware that the last several years have seen judicial action and legislation that address the costs of patent litigation and the vagueness of software patents.  Whether these measures are sufficient without additional legislation is up for debate, but John Oliver’s hypothesis is weakened by his reliance on outdated and largely irrelevant facts and data.

In the interest of making sure truth isn’t sacrificed for the sake of a few good laughs, there are several points we would like to raise.

  • Not every patent owner that licenses its patents rather than practicing them is a “patent troll” deserving of punishment or deterrence.

  • Patent litigation is decreasing, and its costs are overstated.

  • With the America Invents Act of 2011, Congress has already taken steps to reduce the cost of patent litigation.

  • The Supreme Court has also recently addressed the costs of litigation.

  • The Supreme Court addressed vague software patents as well.

Authored by: Michael T. RenaudRobert J. Moore and Jack C. Schecter of Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo, P.C.

©1994-2015 Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo, P.C. All Rights Reserved.