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Press RoomBromberg and Sunstein attorneys in the press Bromberg & Sunstein attorneys are frequently asked to provide expert commentary on topics relating to intellectual property law. Our attorneys have been quoted in the Boston Business Journal, Investor's Business Daily and other acclaimed publications. 2008 Keith Toms, an associate at Bromberg & Sunstein, was quoted in the August 4, 2008 blog The Channel Wire in the story "Dell Attempts To Trademark Cloud Computing." Toms said in part, "Dell pretty much has this through the USPTO. Whether or not they can defend it remains to be seen -- and I'm skeptical about that. But the bottom line is: Dell will probably get this trademark." Jakub Michna, an associate at Bromberg & Sunstein, was quoted in bnet Business Network, May 8, 2008 in the story "Federal Circuit Court Advised on Risks of Limiting Patent Protection." He said, in part, "Today, we need a broad rule to fit our information-based economy." Bruce Sunstein was quoted in the Le Journal de la Haute Horlogerie in the story "The Tiffany vs. eBay lawsuit nears its verdict." Mr. Sunstein said in part, ""Theoretically, a virtual marketplace such as eBay is not legally responsible for hosted content. It is not its role to ensure that the objects exchanged are genuine, unless platform managers are aware of or have been informed of fraud and know that the objects they list are counterfeit." Lee Bromberg was quoted in IPLaw 360 on March 6, 2008. In the story "Attacks On Patent Trolls Draw Concerns," Lee said, "We’re seeing legislation that is cutting back on patent rights, and I don’t Lisa Tittemore was quoted in the Boston Globe, February 28, 2008, in the story "Mass. man suing Apple over patent." Bromberg & Sunstein represents the patent owner, inventor Romek Figa in his lawsuit against Apple, Inc., which is currently pending in the United States Federal District Court for the District of Massachusetts. 2007 Jay Sandvos was quoted in an article entitled "Patent Pushback" in the December, 2007 ABA Journal. He said, in part, "the Federal Circuit is definitely on board with the trend" to limit patent rights. Bruce Sunstein was interviewed for an article in Reuters News Service which was then republished by a number of news media outlets. The story "Tiffany trademark suit against eBay set to open" first appeared on November 13, 2007. Discussing Tiffany's counterfeiting arguments, Bruce said, in part, "They have at least alleged ... that 95 percent of the goods going through the eBay virtual gateway are fake, at least vis a vis Tiffany. And they are trying to use that fact to make new law." Jay Sandvos was interviewed in a November 10, 2007 Boston Globe article, "Northeastern sues Google over patent." Commenting on the Eastern District of Texas as a forum for this type of suit, he said, "Because they have so much patent litigation, they have a certain expertise." Bruce Sunstein was quoted in the November 1, 2007 article in Forbes.com, "Edison Would Be Happy." Robert Asher was interviewed in The National Law Journal Online on October 1, 2007. In the article, "From the Upcoming Issue: Patent review overhaul draws praise," Bob said, in part, "In the past, these reexaminations were filed when litigations started looking like they need help, now [lawyers are] bringing them at the start or before litigation." Bruce Sunstein was quoted in a September 27, 2007 Associated Press article, "Ethics group urges Congress to examine Google's copyright controls." He said, in part, "The law will favor Google as long as they are diligent in taking down videos, but they could be in trouble if they have a cavalier attitude." Steven Saunders was interviewed in a September 7, 2007 article for InfoWorld.com, "Patent reform favors high tech over biotech." Steven said, in part, "The [overall] environment for patents is definitely hurt." Bruce Sunstein was quoted in an August 29, 2007 Associated Press article, "IPhone Hackers Could Face Legal Battle." The article has been carried in a number of media outlets around the country, including Time.com and BusinessWeek.com. Jay Sandvos was quoted in an August 27, 2007 RCR Wireless News article, "Patent Litigation: the art of persuasion; Lay juries often make the call, appeals are common." He said, in part, "[I]n patent litigation, lawyers have to educate the judge and jury on these complicated issues and boil them down to simple explanations." Tom Carey was quoted in CNNMoney.com and Investors.com in their August 13, 2007 article, "Legal Ruling Removes Open-Source Cloud" and August 14, 2007 in CRN.com and Information Week. Tom commented on the recent ruling which indicated that Novell owns the copyrights to Unix software. Jay Sandvos was quoted in the August 10, 2007 Wireless.com article "No Veto for Qualcomm." He said in part, "...it reinforces the ITC as a process that has integrity of it's own that isn't compromised by outside politics." Lee Bromberg was interviewed extensively on August 8, 2007 in the Boston Globe article "Blueprint for Boston: Make it a patent-fight arena." Click here to see the entire text of that interview. Jay Sandvos was quoted in a August 8, 2007 LATimes.com story, "Judge Deals Qualcomm Another Blow." He said, "these guys have a history of being thugs and bad guys." Lisa Tittemore was interviewed in IPLaw360 in their August 3, 2007 article "Debate Rages Over IP Protection in Fashion Industry." She said, in part, that "It has been typically difficult for fashion designers to assert intellectual property rights because the Copyright Act views apparel as a 'useful article'...unlike...other types of art that are covered in the law." Jay Sandvos was interviewed by the Mercury News on July 10, 2007 in the article "Apple shares hit high after analyst predicts cheaper iPhone." His comments include, "it makes sense to seek patent protection for every possible aspect of such a device whether or not Apple actually plans to use it - just to prevent competitors from doing something along these lines." Jay's comments were also picked up by more than 70 newspapers and on-line news services around the world. Bruce Sunstein was interviewed in the June 20, 2007 Information Week article, "Patent injunction Could Roil Wi-Fi Industry." He said, in part, "The Supreme Court has been engaged in its own campaign in the area of 'patent reform.' " Tom Carey was interviewed in the June 20, 2007 New York Times article, "Court Upholds Plavix Patent." He said, in part, "The slew of errors in judgment that were made along the way were very big." Bruce Sunstein and Tom Carey were each quoted in the June 19, 2007 Reuters article, "Apotex to appeal court ruling on Plavix patent." Bruce Sunstein was interviewed on June 14, 2007 by CNNMoney.com. He said, in part, "Anything that helps Google look better before the court will help reduce their legal exposure." Bruce Sunstein was interviewed in the Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly, June 4, 2007 issue. In the article "Panel: lawyer must keep e-mail prospective client confidential," Bruce said, in part, "It puts in sharp relief the challenges that are posed by today's kind of communication." Bruce Sunstein commented in the May 31, 2007 Wi-Fi Planet article "Bluetooth Lawsuit." He said, "It's called the exhaustion doctrine. The patent owner has to pick where they are going to go after the economic activity." Bruce Sunstein was quoted in a May 30, 2007 BusinessWeek.com article, "Qualcomm Under Fire." He said, "In the end, it's in the interest of Nokia and Qualcomm to come to terms." He was also quoted on the Qualcomm matter in the June 8, 2007 issues of eWeek.com and Wireless Week, as well as the June 22, 2007 issue of Information Week. Bruce Sunstein was interviewed by InternetNews.com on May 25, 2007 in the story, "The Sun's For Mobile Phones." Bruce said, in part, "This is pretty cool technology. The Motorola patent says they can capture 75 percent of all light on the display to the solar cell." Bruce Sunstein was interviewed in the May 21, 2007 Information Week story, "Three scenarios for Microsoft's open source threat." He said, in part, "In one sense, this is the patent system at work." Tom Carey was interviewed as part of a story that ran in ZD Net Asia, "Microsoft agitates for open-source patent pacts" on May 15, 2007. He said, "It’s a game in which those who have a lot of resources to throw around have a lot of advantage. Bruce Sunstein was interviewed on May 3, 2007 by EDN.com in the story, "New Supreme Court patent ruling may create uncertainty." He said, in part, "In setting the bar higher, they [The Supreme Court] created uncertainty as well. It's one thing to set the bar higher, but the uncertainty undermines the patent system." Bruce Sunstein was interviewed in an April 11, 2007 story in Information Week, "Toshiba Suit Aims High, Likely to Strike Deal." His comments included, "Since Toshiba is obligated to make licenses available, the company is likely to agree to a deal." Julia Huston's interview with The Boston Globe appeared on Sunday, April 8, 2007 in the article "Between the bar and the glass ceiling." She was interviewed upon becoming the president of the Women's Bar Association of Massachusetts. John Ward commented in a April 6, 2007 InfoWorld story, "AFP-Google settlement leaves open questions." He said, in part, that "compensating AFP would open the door for others to demand similar payments from Google." John was also mentioned in an April 9, 2007 story in ITworld.com on the same topic. Bruce Sunstein was quoted on March 14, 2007 in the Detroit Free Press and the Baltimore Sun commenting on Viacom's filing of a $1 billion dollar lawsuit against Google and YouTube. He said, in part, "Google's motto is 'Don't be evil,' and you could argue that with YouTube that motto is wearing a little thin." Bruce was also quoted on March 13, 2007 in the BusinessWeek.com story "Viacom sues YouTube over copyrights," which also appears in startribune.com. Lisa Tittemore was interviewed in TheDeal.com on March 13, 2007 in an article, "Viacom sues Google over YouTube." "While there is little question that YouTube is hosting copyrighted material," Tittemore said, "it is being posted by a third party, and that as a service provider, Google is likely to argue that it is not responsible for the content its users put on the site. The company is also likely to argue that it takes steps to remove copyrighted material when it becomes aware of it," she added. "However, a court might need to rule on whether YouTube must do more 'active policing' of its site by using filtering technology to prevent the posting of copyrighted material," Tittemore said. Lee Bromberg was quoted on March 4, 2007 in SFGate.com in a story entitled, "Google moves YouTube ahead." Lee Bromberg was interviewed on February 26, 2007 in ZDnet.co.uk in a story entitled, "Why you should care about Microsoft's patent payout." When a big verdict comes in, "it’s called ringing the bell," said Lee Bromberg. "This is really loud ringing of the bell." Lee was also quoted on this story on the February 23, 2007 C/NET NEWS and on February 26, 2007 in TheStreet.com. Steve Saunders was interviewed in TheStreet.com on February 23, 2007 in a story entitled, "TechWeek: No Fair Play for Microsoft." He said, "Patent suits place a very heavy burden on the plaintiff; they have to prove many things and connect many dots. . . . If one dot is not connected, the case can be reversed." Lee Bromberg was quoted in The Wall Street Journal Online's February 13, 2007 story, "Belgian Court Says Google Broke Copyright Law." He also commented on this story in the February 13, 2007 Information Week, Business Week, and C/NET NEWS.com. Lee Bromberg was quoted in Buzzle.com in its February 6, 2007 story, "Everyone's a Winner as Peace is Declared in Apple v Apple Settlement of rancorous 30 year logo battle likely to herald charts comeback for the Beatles as tracks become available for downloading." Lee also commented on this story in the February 9, 2007, Markenbusiness. Lee Bromberg was interviewed by Guardian Unlimited on February 6, 2007 in the article "We Can Work It Out." A story about the Apple v Apple settlement between the Beatles’ publishing company and Apple Computer. Lee Bromberg was interviewed on February 6, 2007 by Style Diary in an article "Copying Fashion. Are Inspired Collections Too Much of a Good Thing?" John Stickevers was quoted in Red Herring in the February 3, 2007 article, "Cisco and Apple go back to bargaining table to negotiate terms of multi-million-dollar trademark." He said, "I think Cisco will relinquish the name to Apple because there is a likelihood of consumer confusion." Lee Bromberg commented on the "Apple, Cisco and iPhone name Saga" on February 2, 2007 on Tech.blorge.com. He said, "They’re saying maybe there's a way we can live and let live. . . . Just let the marketplace deal with the issue in an effective way." Lee was also quoted on this same story in eWeek.com on February 2, 2007. Lisa Tittemore was interviewed on January 25, 2007 by IP Law 360 in the article "Fox Slaps YouTube with Subpoena." She commented that “Google may decide to fight for freedom of expression and try to resist the subpoena on behalf of the subscriber. Erik Belt was interviewed on January 22, 2007 by The Pink Sheet in an article entitled "Licensing Deals May Become More Adversarial Following MedImmune Ruling." Tom Carey was interviewed January 19, 2007 by the DowJones Newswires in the article "Apotex Could Face Tough Fight in Plavix Dispute." Thomas Carey was interviewed on January 16, 2007 by OpenSource.com in the article "IP Attorney: Bankrupt or Not, SCO case is 'boring'." His comments include "if there is no Chapter 11 filing, then the trial goes on as is. SCO suffers a slow and painful death rather than a quick one." Bruce Sunstein was interviewed on January 11, 2007 by The Wall Street Journal in the article "Cisco Suit May Snag Apple's iPhone Plan." His comments include, "The one who is most committed to a trademark is usually the one who gets it." Bruce was also interviewed on the iPhone suit by CNETNews.com (1/10/07), MarketWatch (1/11/07), The SlipperyBrick Blog (1/12/07) and The Hollywood Reporter (1/13/07). Erik Belt was interviewed on January 10, 2007 by The Washington Times in the article, "Court Eases Patent Appeals," in which he predicted that "the court's ruling would change the way licensing agreements are negotiated." Julia Huston was interviewed on January 4, 2007 by the BostonHerald.com on the article "Boston Co. in Bongo with Kawasaki." Her comments include, "The infringing Kawasaki bongo drum is interfering with the sales of First Act's bongo drum, so First Act brought this lawsuit to preserve its position in the marketplace and protect its patent rights." Bruce Sunstein was interviewed on January 3, 2007 by Internetnews.com in the article "Google, Apple, Napster Services in Danger?" "This is going to be an interesting fight," Sunstein said. Bruce Sunstein was interviewed on January 2, 2007 by Information Week in the article "Apple's Jobs Keeps His Job, But Legal Perils Remain While Steve Jobs retains Control over the Apple helm, the company faces other legal challenges this year, over Patents and Monopoly Law." 2006 Lee Bromberg was interviewed on November 15, 2006 by Bloomberg.com in the article "Google's $200 Million Legal Reserve Underscores YouTube Worries." His comments include, "It's inevitable that they'll be making use of copyrighted material." Steven Saunders was interviewed in New Zealand Reseller News on November 15, 2006 in the article, "Patent Protection Flashpoint Court Case" concerning the patent infringement litigation case, KSR International v Teleflex, and the amicus briefs filed with the Supreme Court by Microsoft and Cisco on behalf of KSR. Bruce Sunstein was quoted on November 13, 2006 by Government Computer News in the article "Sun Opens Java," concerning Sun Microsystems Inc.'s release of its Java programming language source code. He stated, "There are open-source places and commercial places, and it is difficult to be in between. . . . Maybe this is a way of Sun saying if Java goes open source, it will have better distribution, and that will be good for Sun in the long term." Bruce Sunstein was interviewed on November 8, 2006 by OpenSource.com, in the article "IP Attorney: Microsoft-Novell Partnership Creates Internal Competition for Open Source." His comments include, "Make no mistake, Microsoft is not doing this because it's 'good,' but because it is good business. . . . It's the same way IBM embraced Linux more than five years ago. . . . The fact is, IBM sells lot of hardware and now they are able to sell hardware in a market they did not have before. . . . For Linux overall this is a celebration of having come of age. Linux is now in its adulthood." Bruce Sunstein and Lee Bromberg were interviewed by IP Law360 on November 6, 2006 in the article, "Law Firm Profile: Bromberg & Sunstein LLP." Bruce Sunstein's comments include, "Business and IP have been cornerstones of our practice from the outset. . . . We have a deep skill set and a shared vision of the power of IP as a strategic business tool. . . . We take a big view and approach that many firms without an IP-centric view wouldn't figure out." Lee Bromberg stated, "[We] enjoy having a focused practice in IP in a business context because it is one that gives us very attractive blue-chip clients and really exciting legal issues." Bruce Sunstein was interviewed on October 20, 2006 by Warren Communications News in the article "Patent Wiki No Panacea for Perceived Ills, Inventor Rep Says," regarding a proposed review website for patent applications. His comments include, "I say, what's not to like [about the proposal]. . . . One could actually implement this without rule changes. . . . It's simply prior art that exists. . . in cyberspace. . . . [But] what if we give a prior art party and nobody shows up? . . . It's possible that although there's great fanfare, nothing will happen." Bruce Sunstein was interviewed on October 19, 2006 by TheNationalJournal.com in the article "Agency Will Test Community Reviews of Patents," regarding the proposed "wiki" approach of the Community Patent Review Project. His comments include, "[There are] real costs associated in denying or delaying patent coverage to innovators." He warned the leader of the project to "go boldly where no man has gone before, but carefully." Bruce Sunstein was interviewed in the October 3, 2006 Investor's Business Daily about the Web "Mash-Ups" (customizable combinations of applications and data, also called composite applications). His quotes, featured in the story "Mash-Ups May Smash Up Some Software Kingdoms," include, "There are a lot of gray areas here. . . . The point is that creating a mash-up means you had better get permission." Lee Bromberg was interviewed in the September 27, 2006 edition of Business Week Online about a battle between Google, Inc. and a Brussels-based copyright group over a ruling that Google could not reproduce certain materials on its Belgian Google News or Google.be website. His quotes, featured in the story "Google In Tussle for Digital Rights: A Belgian Ruling Sets the Stage For a Battle Between Publishers and the Search Giant Over Who Sets the Rules For Posting Copyrighted Content," include, "Belgium is 'a chink in the armor'. . . . [Google has taken a] somewhat aggressive approach on copyright. . . . [and may need to make] an acknowledgement of the copyright and perhaps some sort of payment for the usage." Lee Bromberg was interviewed on September 25, 2006 by Shanghai Daily News about Google, Inc's. refusal to comply with a Belgium court's order to post on its website the Belgian court's judgment, pending Google's appeal of the finding that it violated copyright law. His quotes, featured in the story "Google Ignores Court Order Pending Appeal," include, "They've hit . . . a serious bump in the road in this Belgian court ruling. . . . They may have to either make a deal with that Belgian-based publisher or somehow change their behavior." Bruce Sunstein was interviewed on September 23, 2006 by Reuters UK. His quotes, featured in the story "HP CEO Says He Approved Email Ruse in Leak Probe," include, "Where you intentionally misrepresent the nature of a communication to get information, that's certainly a wrong." Tom Carey was interviewed on September 1, 2006 by the Associated Press about the the Federal Trade Commission's failure to stop settlements by drug companies with generic rivals, which the FTC believes slow the introduction of low-cost generics. His quotes, featured in the story "FTC Head: Payments to Generic Firms Bad," include, "The incentive to go down this path is enormous. . . . It preserves the monopoly for the patent holder and this is big, big money. . . . Drug companies have an obligation to call the FTC's bluff." Lee Bromberg was interviewed in the September 2006 edition of eContent Magazine about a French publisher filing suit on behalf of three of it's publishing houses against both Google, Inc. and Google France, claiming Google has produced counterfeits of its books on the Book Search site. His comments, featured in the story "Google: On en Parlera: French Publisher Sues Google Book Search," include, "Google doesn't see itself as copying anything. . . . But, the contrary argument is that in order to make a work searchable, an electronic copy has to be made. . . . Google should get the copyright holder's permission." Tim Murphy was interviewed in the August 30, 2006 edition of PharmExec Direct about the rising number of cases in which brand name patents have been invalidated, either partially or completely. His quotes, featured in the story "Federal Courts Get Tough on Patents," include, "Pharmaceutical companies have been very aggressive in extending the life of a patent. . . When you're really aggressive, you're bound to have some pushback. . . Even though the successes may be limited [in winning a secondary patent case] there's so much money at stake." Erik Belt was interviewed in the August 13, 2006 edition of the Contra Costa Times about the recent decision of a federal judge that baseball fans shouldn't have to pay to view stats in fantasy baseball leagues. His comments, featured in the story "MLB Trying Again to Alienate Fans With Greed," include, "It means for your rotisserie team, you can continue doing what you've been doing for the past 15 years without worry. . . . You're not gonna have to pay a huge fee to play. . . . Just as important, it means that small companies who operate these leagues won't be going out of business." Tom Carey was interviewed on July 28, 2006 by the Associated Press. In the story "Bristol-Myers Announces Probe; Profit Off," regarding Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. being the subject of a criminal antitrust probe over a pending deal with a generic drug maker involving its best-selling product, Plavix, and a drop in their second quarter profits, Tom commented on the rising number of agreements among drug companies: "The FTC is concerned about the increasing number of agreements like the one with Apotex that drug companies are making and is studying whether they mute competition. . . . A criminal probe into the agreement is highly unusual, if not unprecedented, and is likely to prevent further arrangements. . . . No company wants to find itself on the wrong end of a criminal action. . . . It is a political black eye, it could mean jail time for executives." Tom Carey was interviewed in the July 28, 2006 edition of Forbes.com about the issue of whether large drug companies will be permitted to settle with copycat generic drug makers. His comments, featured in the story "Patent Wars," include, "In their [FTC regulators] view, the public interest is not being served. . . . It makes sense for the generic company to settle up and go happily along until the patent expires. In their view, all that's happening is the drug companies are coming up with ways to serve monopoly profits." Meredith Ainbinder was quoted on July 28, 2006 by Mass High Tech: The Journal of New England Technology in the article "Legal E-mail Driving Valora's Growth." Her comments include, "The ability to keep documents electronically has given rise to the desire to do so. . . . The easier it is to use a tool, the more people want to implement it." John Stickevers was interviewed in the July 24, 2006 edition of CNETNews.com. In the story "YouTube dances the copyright tango," concerning helicopter pilot and journalist Robert Tur's lawsuit claiming that his video of the 1992 Los Angeles riots was posted without his permission on YouTube's video-sharing website, John commented on YouTube's recent practice of putting ads on its site next to video clips: "They hadn't done this before. . .. The law states that you can't receive profits directly attributable to the infringing content. I think this would make it much harder for them to make an assertion that they weren't profiting." Tom Carey was interviewed by E-Commerce Times on July 24, 2006. His comments, featured in the story "SCO Group Claims IBM Destroyed Evidence," include, "This case has had so many false leads to it, what is one more?" . . . It has all been a bunch of hooey. . . .SCO's actions throughout this lawsuit have had the earmarks of someone with no case but a lot of energy. . . . Now I think the open source community knows to make sure it does business in a clean and transparent manner." Tom Carey was interviewed in the July 7, 2006 edition of CRN, in the story "FireStar Files Patent Suit Against Red Hat," which also ran on InformationWeek.com. The story concerns a case filed in Texas over JBoss' Hibernate 3.0's object mapping technology. His comments include, "It's potentially more significant than the SCO [copyright] case because it's about a patent that covers a basic concept or idea, not an expression of an idea, which copyright covers. . . . It's a more powerful case. That's why RIM [Research In Motion] ended up settling [with NTP] for so much. . . . [The SCO's case]effect on open source is nil. It's dead." John Ward was interviewed in the July 1, 2006 edition of The Boston Globe. His comments, featured in the story "Trademark dispute boils over: Celebrity Chef Jasper White sues Cape Cod eatery over 'summer shack' name," include, "If one restaurant serves a bad clam, the other restaurant does not want to suffer lost business from customers who think the restaurants are commonly owned." Lee Bromberg was quoted by the Associated Press on June 29, 2006. In the story "Companies Fight Back Against China Piracy," he commented on the battle against Chinese piracy of intellectual property, stating that the pirates appear to have the upper hand. "For every preventive measure companies take, the wise guys will find it and you're back to square one. . . . I don't think the good guys are winning yet." John Stickevers was interviewed on June 14, 2006 by GAMESPOT news. His comments, featured in the story "Nintendo patent signals imminent suit against Microsoft?," include, Although the title of [Nintendo's new patent - 'Messaging service for video game systems with buddy list that displays game being played'] seem broad, and one might think that Nintendo could assert this patent against Microsoft's Xbox Live service, the scope of the patent is much narrower." Bruce Sunstein was quoted by eWeek.com on June 12, 2006. In the story "Qualcomm Tries to Block Nokia," he commented on the patent infringement suits filed in the U.S. and the U.K. by chip maker Qualcomm regarding its GSM Technology in the U.S. and the U.K: "There's a very strong incentive for these parties to reach an agreement. If you look at the European Convention, policy matters are much more important when they're in a patent environment than they are in the U.S. . . . The Europeans are more hostile to patents. This will likely help Nokia. [If Nokia prevails in the European Union before the case is heard here,] it might solve everything." Bruce Sunstein was quoted in the June 12, 2006 edition of MultiChannel News. In the story, "Cablevision Network DVR in Court’s Hands," he commented on litigation between Cablevision Systems Corp. and broadcast networks, cable outlets and Hollywood studios in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, concerning Cablevision's network-based digital video recorder service (called "remote storage DVR" (or RS-DVR)): “It hinges on Cablevision being able to say that kind of [network DVR] usage by the consumer is fair, and they’re just providing the technology for it. It’s not what they [Cablevision] are doing is fair use, per se. . . . I think this will go all the way [to the Supreme Court], and even then it may not be decided until Congress steps in." Lee Bromberg was interviewed in the June 8, 2006 edition of the Wall Street Journal. In the story "A Patent Fight Over iPod Shows The Merits of Buzz," he commented on the patent infringement lawsuit filed in San Francisco by Creative Technology Ltd of Singapore against Apple Computer Inc. concerning hard drive MP3 technology, and countersuits filed by Apple in Madison, Wis. and Texarkana, Texas, accusing Creative of infringing Apple's patents for digital music players. He stated: "You've got to see this as a tough fight for Creative." Lee Bromberg was interviewed in the June 5, 2006 edition of the Boston Business Journal. In the story "High court's eBay decision seen reining in the trolls," he commented on the Supreme Court's decision concerning the standard for granting injunctions in patent infringement cases, noting that the decision may reduce the settlements obtained by patent plaintiffs: "It adds a little element of risk for the patentee . . . . They're not quite so sure they're getting their injunction." Bruce Sunstein was interviewed by Information Week on May 30, 2006. His comments, featured in the story "Symantec-Microsoft lawsuit shows Vista straining ties," which appeared on CMPNet Asia, include, "For Symantec, this is about survival as Microsoft threatens to move more into Symantec's space." Bruce Sunstein was interviewed in the May 29, 2006 edition of USA Today. In the story "Networks Fight Cablevision Service," he observed that, compared to their case against VCRs and digital video recorders (DVRs), network studios have "an easier case" against Cablevision Systems' service that permits a digital set-top box function like a DVR (called "remote storage DVR" (or RS-DVR)), because RS-DVR "is a service sold to the consumer, while TiVo is a device sold to the consumer." John Ward was interviewed on May 21, 2006 by The New York Times, concerning West Point's demand that our client West Point Graduates Against the War cease its use of the words "West Point". His comments, featured in the story "And Now, a Few Words on West Point®", include, "Nothing in trademark law prevents an individual from accurately describing his status in society . .. It's called nominative fair use. What they have to establish is that the use could confuse someone. But you could ask any 12-year-old if an antiwar group is being sponsored by the U.S. Army, and any 12-year-old would tell you no." Lee Bromberg was quoted in the May 18, 2006 edition of Communications Daily, in the story "Labels' Suit Against XM Widens Fight Over Future Recording Devices," which concerns record labels' suit claiming copyright infringement each time XM's satellite customers use XM's portable recording device to copy songs. His comments include, "[U]ltimately it will be squarely litigated on the fair-use issue. . . . If XM could work out a deal like iTunes, they might. But if their business model doesn't support that, then they're going to push this case to the wall because they see it as a direct threat to the viability of their industry." Lisa Tittemore was interviewed on May 8, 2006 by MarketWatch and her comments are featured in the article "Apple Beats the Beatles In London Court". Her comments include, "In the end, it looks like it came down to what the parties said in the agreement. . . . And it looks like they needed an outside opinion to sort that out." Bruce Sunstein was interviewed in the May 2006 edition of EContent Magazine in the article "Success Has a Thousand Litigants". His comments include, "Samuel Morse tried to patent the means for communications to be effective over a distance, whether by sounds or by electromagnetism, but the patent office wouldn't let him have that patent. It was too abstract." Bruce Sunstein was interviewed on April 20, 2006 by MSNBC.com in the article "Are Copycat Cars a Sincere Form of Flattery?". His comments concerning trade dress infringement include, “Generally, you can’t win unless the consumer is confused by what they see, so if you recognize a car is a Lexus and think it looks like a Mercedes, generally that’s not enough". Lee Bromberg was interviewed in the April 17, 2006 edition of The San Diego Union-Tribune. His comments, featured in the story "Stat Shutdown Unlikely, Attorney Says," include, "First, the use of stats is a copyright issue that is 'a very thin claim'. . . . Major League Baseball is saying, 'We own the rights to those stats,' but of course, newspapers publish those stats every day. . . . Someone like Michael Jordan controls the use of his image and name, so if he's endorsing a product, he has to give his permission and if he charges for it, they have to pay his price. . . . The fantasy operators aren't saying Derek Jeter endorses fantasy baseball when they use his name. . . . That's a little bit murkier, but again I think MLB's argument is thin. . . . If I were a betting man, I don't think (an MLB victory is likely)." On April 14, 2006, Bruce Sunstein was interviewed by internetnews.com in the article "Report Details DMCA Misuses", and also by TMCNet in the article "EFF Says Seven-year-old Law Is Overly Restrictive." His comments include, "The DMCA is an imperfect piece of legislation, but ever since Adam and Eve shared the apple we live in a world that is imperfect. . . . The DMCA provides a fig leaf to content providers, and that's a good thing in the age in which we live. . . . I'm not worrying about a chilling effect from the DMCA. . . . For every story of abuse, there are millions of legal downloads that have been protected against illicit copying by combination of digital rights management and the DMCA." Bruce Sunstein was interviewed in the April 14, 2006 edition of The Wall Street Journal. His comments, featured in the story "TiVo Wins a Vital Patent Dispute," include, "There's little doubt, if TiVo wins here, it will have more business leverage in the marketplace, and more people will be willing to pay them money." Lee Bromberg was interviewed in the April 8, 2006 edition of The Washington Post. His comments, featured in the story "'Da Vinci Code' Plaintiffs Fail in Quest to Show Ideas Were Stolen," include, "Copyright protects the expression, not the idea. . . . What Dan Brown did is simply make use of some of those ideas, but the expression was his and was original. . . . I'd be surprised if [the plaintiffs] took an appeal. Judge Smith wrote a lengthy decision and sort of beat [the case] to death to dissuade the losing party." Lee Bromberg was quoted in a March 29, 2006 article in BusinessWeek Online regarding a trademark dispute between Apple Computer and Apple Corps Ltd., the record company. The dispute, playing out in a London courtroom, is focused on Apple Computer's iPod music player and its iTunes Music Store. His comments, featured in the story "Apple vs. That Other Apple," include, "[T]he only risk to the record company is the cost of the litigation. . . . It has nothing to lose here, and they may feel that it's time to roll the dice. . . . Apple Computer can argue that its use of the trademark has nothing to do with music. . . . They could say, 'This isn't our music. We're selling access to this service.' That's another argument for a low royalty." Lee Bromberg was quoted in a March 29, 2006 article in MarketWatch, which also concerns the trademark dispute between Apple Computer and Apple Corps Ltd. His comments, featured in the story "Battle of the Apples in London," include, "[I]t presents this wonderful situation of technology outdistancing trademark law. . . . It behooves Apple [Computer] to protect its position because the question is 'How high is up?' in terms of what Apple Corps wants." Erik Belt was interviewed in the March 29, 2006 edition of Investor's Business Daily. His comments, featured in the story "Supreme Court's eBay Patent Right Case Has Both Sides Saying Innovation At Risk," include, "The court needs to protect and enforce patent rights. . . . Allowing injunctions is one way to do that. . . . Often the most innovative inventions come from small companies or individuals. . . . Licensing is perfectly valid." Bruce Sunstein was interviewed in the March 28, 2006 edition of Marketwatch in an article named "TV Shows Grapple With New Video-piracy Threat." His comments include, "Following the Grokster decision, ... sites [that facilitate TV piracy] are living on borrowed time." Bruce Sunstein was interviewed on March 20, 2006 by Red Herring and his quotes are featured in the article "Method Patents Go to Court." Lee Bromberg was interviewed on February 27, 2006 by Information Week regarding Yahoo's decision to prohibit advertisers from bidding on search keywords that contain a competitor's trademarks. His comments, featured in the story "Yahoo Limits Advertising with Competing Trademarks," include, "It's a prudent move by Yahoo . . . . It's one thing to put your billboard up next to the other guy's. But this, it seems to me, is different in nature and kind because you're employing search engine technology to guide customers from the Internet to you." Tom Carey was interviewed on February 22, 2006 by SearchOpenSource.com and his quotes are featured in the story "IBM Subpoenas Signal Shift to Darker Side of SCO Case". Tom Carey was interviewed on January 11, 2006 by CNET News.com. His comments, featured in the story "Overhaul of GPL set for public release" published in ZDNet News, include, "It's tremendously important . . . . Probably most lawyers who have an active practice in the software area have read the GPL [GNU General Public License] and committed its essence to memory, which is something you can't say about any other license." Tom Carey was interviewed in the January 9, 2006 news section of SearchOpenSource.com concerning SCO's legal battle against Linux vendor Novel, Inc. His comments, featured in the story "IP attorney: Why SCO has no case", include, "The key to the case is that IBM specifically negotiated with SCO a clause that permitted it to use the same programmers who saw the Unix code to make competing products. . . . The result is, absent literal copying of meaningful amounts of Unix into Linux, SCO has no case." Lee Bromberg was interviewed in the January 2, 2006 edition of Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly concerning a verdict in favor of First Act, Inc., represented by Bromberg & Sunstein. His comments, featured in the article "Federal Jury in Boston Awards $20M in Musical Instrument Case", include "[A] courtroom performance [on a First Act trumpet] of . . . the jazz classic 'Misty' . . . 'just transformed the mood in that room, the way music does. . . . [I]t certainly was proof positive that instruments will play [for the] short-term and [hold up over the] long term." In January 2006, Julia Huston was interviewed by the Forbes Radio Channel show "America's Most Influential Women In Government, Technology, Business, and the Law" regarding the Patent Reform Act of 2005. Click here to listen. 2005 The December 29, 2005 edition of The National Business Review cited Bromberg & Sunstein's settlement on behalf of Mediacom in the article "Patent Troll Bites Google". Lee Bromberg was interviewed in the December 12, 2005 edition of Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly and his quotes appear in the article "Federal Jury in Boston Awards $20M in Musical Instrument Case". Bruce Sunstein was interviewed in the November 28, 2005 issue of RCR Wireless News and his quotes appear in the article "DRM: Too Many (Private) Solutions to Minor Problem?". Bruce Sunstein was interviewed in the November 11, 2005 edition of United Press International and his quotes appear in the article "Globe Talk: Qualcomm Fights Claims". Bruce Sunstein was interviewed in the October 2005 issue of EContent Magazine and his quotes appear in the story "Web Site Sued For Controversial Trip into Internet Past ". Lisa Tittemore was quoted in the September 2005 edition of Inc. Magazine in a case study article about Jonathan Hoffman and his company, School Zone Publishing. Bruce Sunstein was interviewed in the August 31, 2005 edition of The San Francisco Chronicle and his quotes appear in the story "Creative Wins Patent For Song-Navigation System". Julia Huston was featured in the August 15, 2005 edition of the International Trademark Association Bulletin, for her work in drafting and introducing a bill to adopt the Model State Trademark Bill in Massachusetts. Lee Bromberg was interviewed in the August 15, 2005 edition of Wireless Week Magazine and his comments are featured in the article "Healing the Patent Wars". Bruce Sunstein was interviewed in the August 13, 2005 edition of the Los Angeles Times in the article "Google Puts Book Copying on Hold". Tom Carey was quoted in the August 4, 2005 edition of Eweek Magazine in the featured story "Analysts: Novell vs. SCO Is No 'Slam Dunk'". Lee Bromberg was quoted in the online edition of NetworkWorld Magazine on July 28, 2005 in the article "Cisco, ISS, Michael Lynn and Black Hat Sign Legal Accord". Bruce Sunstein was interviewed on July 12, 2005 by Tech News World discussing RSS Copyright. Lisa Tittemore was honored as the WBA's Unsung Hero for July in the July/August edition of Women's Bar Review for her role as "a mentor to many women" and for her involvement in a variety of pro bono activities. Bruce Sunstein was interviewed on July 6, 2005 by Forbes.com for the story "EU Vote Leaves Tech Companies Vulnerable". Bruce Sunstein was quoted in the July 6, 2005 edition of the Financial Times in the story "European Software Patent Laws Face Rejection". Bruce Sunstein was interviewed in the July 1, 2005 edition of Electronic Business Magazine and his quotes are featured in the story "Tech Companies Opt for Settlements; As Patent Lawsuits Increase, Companies Pick Their Battles Carefully". Lisa Tittemore participated in a "virtual roundtable" on the June 2005 Supreme Court decision in MGM v. Grokster, and her comments were published in the cover article, titled "Inside Grokster," of the August/September 2005 edition of Internet Law & Strategy. Bruce Sunstein was interviewed on the June 30, 2005 'NewsTalk Magazine' show on 940am WFAW-Milwaukee discussing the potential impact of the Supreme Court decision in MGM v. Grokster, regarding copyright infringement by P2P software. Bruce Sunstein was interviewed by CBS News on June 30, 2005 regarding the Grokster decision of the U.S. Supreme Court. Bruce Sunstein was interviewed for the June 28, 2005 edition of the Boston Herald and his quotes are featured in the story "Supremes Hit Online Pirates". Lee Bromberg was interviewed by New England Cable News on June 27, 2005 about the Supreme Court's decision in MGM v. Grokster. Lee Bromberg was quoted in the June 17, 2005 edition of InternetNews in the article "Google Library: Peril for Publishers?". Tim Murphy was quoted in "IP is an attractive - and tricky - form of collateral" in the June 3, 2005 edition of the Boston Business Journal. Lee Bromberg was quoted in the May 16, 2005 edition of Electronic Engineering Times in an article named "Documented Innovators- Taiwanese Tech Companies Are Learning the Importance of a U.S. Patent Portfolio". Bruce Sunstein was quoted in the May 6, 2005 edition of Investor's Business Daily in an article about the Rambus patent legal battle. Lisa Tittemore was quoted in the featured article "First and Foremost" in the April 25, 2005 edition of Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly. Tim Murphy was quoted in the April 22, 2005 edition of The Scientist magazine in the article named "Research tool patents debated - Supreme Court appeal could limit licensing income for research tool makers". Lee Bromberg was quoted in the April 21, 2005 edition of BioWorld Today in an article named "Arguments Heard In Supreme Court On Early Research IP". Bruce Sunstein was interviewed on March 31, 2005 by Internetnews.com in a story about the Toshiba/Lexar case. Lee Bromberg was quoted in the March 29, 2005 Investor's Business Daily in the featured story "Search Firms, Legal Tussles In Using Trademarked Keywords". Bruce Sunstein was quoted in the March 29, 2005 Los Angeles Times in the featured story "Ruling Could Halt Sony's Playstation- A judge's verdict to stop selling units is on hold while the company appeals a patent verdict". Bruce Sunstein was quoted in the March 17, 2005 issue of Business Week Online in an article named "Memo to Apple: Lay Off Your Fans". Bruce Sunstein was interviewed in the March 14, 2005 issue of RCR Wireless News Magazine in the featured story "CTIA Takes Technology Over Content In Supreme Court Case". Tom Carey was quoted in the March 14, 2005 issue of Business Week Online in an article named "A Linux Nemesis on the Rocks". Quotes from Lee Bromberg are featured in "Open Season on Patents" in the March 2005 issue of Genome Technology. In March, 2005, Bruce Sunstein was quoted by ZDnet in an article entitled "TiVo Records New DVD Patents". In February, 2005 Bruce Sunstein was interviewed by Internetnews.com and his quotes are featured in the story "AMD Buys Into Patriot's Patent". In February, 2005, Bruce Sunstein wrote an article for BusinessWeek Online named "Patents: Billions Riding on a Word". In February, 2005 Bruce Sunstein was interviewed by TechTarget Media regarding intellectual property strategy for technology companies. In February, 2005, Bruce Sunstein was interviewed by Florida's Morning Show on WGMX 94.3 FM regarding the legal rights a consumer has in terms of copying DVD's and downloading music. Bruce Sunstein was interviewed by MIT Technology Review, and his quotes appear in the article "Patently Open Source" in the January 12th edition. Bruce Sunstein was interviewed by Forbes.com and his quotes are featured in the story "Apple Bites The Fans That Feed It" that appears on the front page of the January 7, 2005 online edition. 2004 Bruce Sunstein was quoted in the December 2, 2004 Los Angeles Times in the story "Yahoo Resolves Trademark Case" In November, 2004, Bob Asher was quoted by TMC Net in the article "Power One Inc. Announces Favorable Conclusion of Vicor Patent Litigation". In November, 2004, Bruce Sunstein was featured in the article "Do Software Users Need Indemnification?". The Boston Patent Law Associations (BPLA), one of the leading organizations of intellectual property lawyers in the U.S., selected Bromberg & Sunstein to address important patent law questions currently under consideration by the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. In September 2004, we submitted an amicus curiae brief on the BPLA's behalf to answer these important questions. Erik Belt, a partner at Bromberg & Sunstein and Co-Chair of the BPLA Amicus Brief Committee, wrote the brief. For more details, view the downloadable version of the legal brief and the background article. In September, 2004 Lee Bromberg was quoted by Forbes.com and CNETnews.com regarding the lawsuit of Apple Corps, a record company founded by the Beatles, against Apple Computer. Julia Huston was quoted in the September 2004 issue of College Athletics and the Law regarding the use by college sports teams of Native American names and symbols. Bruce Sunstein was quoted in the article "CD-DVDs Are On Their Way to Market at Last", which appeared in the September 10, 2004 edition of Radio & Records Magazine. On September 13, 2004, Bruce Sunstein was quoted by Communications Daily in an article titled "XM-Recording Software Raises Legal Concerns". On September 17, 2004, Tom Carey was featured in an interview by ITWorld.com on the topic of "Linux Patent Risks: Things to Consider". Tom Carey was quoted in the August 11, 2004 edition of eWeek Magazine in the featured story "Lawyers Weigh in on Linux Patent Threat". On July 14, 2004, Lee Bromberg was quoted by Forbes.com in an article about Sony's latest patent lawsuit. On June 22, 2004, Tom Carey was quoted by NewsFactor Network in an article titled "Supreme Court: AMD can get Intel documents." CRN quoted Tom Carey on June 14, 2004 in an article about SCO's IP battles against Novell and IBM. Tom Carey was quoted by Eweek Magazine on June 11, 2004 in an article about recent court rulings in SCO's IP cases. Bruce Sunstein was quoted by the San Jose Mercury News on June 7, 2004, in an article about RFID technology. Lee Bromberg was quoted in the Boston Business Journal on June 4, 2004, in a special feature on Intellectual Property Law. The San Jose Mercury News quoted Bruce Sunstein on June 4, 2004 regarding the patent lawsuit between Google and Yahoo. On June 3, 2004, Bruce Sunstein was quoted by the Hartford Courant regarding the music industry's efforts to eliminate illegal copying and downloading of CDs. The June 2004 issue of Electronic Business contains a quote from Bruce Sunstein regarding the cost of IP litigation. On June 1, 2004, Bruce Sunstein was quoted in IEEE Spectrum Magazine regarding the breadth of Acacia's patent claims. Solid State Technology Magazine quoted Lee Bromberg in their May edition article titled "How can companies foster innovation?" Tom Carey was quoted by the Linux Insider on May 25, 2004 in an article about new standards for contributors to the Linux kernel. He was quoted on the same topic in Tech News World on May 28, 2004. On May 10, 2004, Tom Carey was quoted by News Forge regarding the lawsuit between Lindows and Xandros. On May 6, 2004, Bruce Sunstein was quoted by the Associated Press in an article about DVD copying software. Electronic Gaming Business quoted Bruce Sunstein on May 5, 2004, in an article titled "Patent Wars About to Begin in the Video Gaming Arena." Bruce Sunstein was quoted in the May 2004 issue of Internet Retailer regarding retail e-commerce patent lawsuits. Tom Carey was quoted by E-Week on April 29 and April 30, 2004 in articles regarding SCO's claims pertaining to the GNU General Public License (GPL). On April 27, 2004, Bruce Sunstein was quoted by InternetNews.com in the story "Chipmaker Expands Patent Fight to 150." The Sandusky Register quoted Bruce Sunstein on April 25, 2004 for an article about the illegal downloading of music from the internet. Lee Bromberg was quoted by Investor's Business Daily on April 19, 2004 regarding the European Commission's investigation of antitrust issues. On April 12, 2004, Lee Bromberg was featured in a Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly article on the establishment of jurisdiction in First Act v. Brook Mays Music Company. On April 5, 2004, Bruce Sunstein was featured in a Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly article on the case between Truebro, Inc and Plumberex Specialty Products which resulted in a verdict of $2.1 million for patent infringement. Bruce was an expert witness for the plaintiff. On March 24, 2004, Tom Carey was quoted by Bloomberg News in an article about the lawsuit between SCO and IBM. CRN quoted Tom Carey on March 24, 2004 regarding the European Union's decision against Microsoft. Ed Dailey was quoted in the Boston Business Journal on March 19, 2004 in an article titled "State Sees Legal Savings from New Bid System." On March 10, 2004, Bruce Sunstein was quoted in The Financial Times regarding the lawsuit between Kodak and Sony. On March 3, 2004, Tom Carey was quoted by eWeek and CRN in articles regarding the SCO copyright infringement case. Lee Bromberg's interview by Sky Radio on protecting intellectual property assets in the global economy will air in March 2004 on WORLD BUSINESS MONITOR: Successful Business & Legal Strategies in the International Marketplace. Click here to listen. Lee's interview can also be heard on the www.SkyRadioNet.com website following the March broadcast. Lee Bromberg was interviewed on Legal Insight, an Atlantic Coast In-House program, on the topic of using opinions of counsel to reduce risks of patient infringement liability. To hear the interview, click here. Bruce Sunstein was quoted in the February 17, 2004 issue of Investor's Business Daily regarding the implications of Google's IPO delay. On February 17, 2004, Tom Carey was quoted in an IT News Australia article titled "Novell Challenges SCO Claims in Unix Code." This article also appeared in the February 13, 2004 issue of Information Week. Tom Carey appeared in a February 14, 2004 article about the leak of Microsoft source code in Financial Times. On February 10, 2004, Tom Carey was quoted by CRN in an article titled "Expert Claims SCO-Novell Copyright Dispute Will Halt Linux Customer Lawsuit." Tom Carey was quoted in Eweek on February 6, and Business Week on February 2, 2004, in articles about the ongoing dispute between SCO and IBM. Lee Bromberg was interviewed by Investor's Business Daily for a February 2, 2004 article regarding recent trends in medical devices and patent protection. 2003 Julia Huston was quoted in Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly in an article title "The Growing World of Patent Litigation" on December 22, 2003. In the December 19 - 25, 2003 issue of the Boston Business Journal, Julia Huston was quoted in an article regarding a trademark lawsuit between two banks. Bruce Sunstein was quoted in CNET News on November 28, 2003 in an article regarding Wi-Fi security dangers. Bruce Sunstein was interviewed on 1330 WNTA's The Chuck Diamond Show on November 21, 2003 regarding consumers' rights and responsibilities when making copies of cds, dvds, and downloading music. On November 21, 2003, Lee Bromberg was quoted by Reuters News Wire in an article titled "Drug Firms Take Aim at Canada Trade." On November 20, 2003, Bruce Sunstein was interviewed on The Morning Show on WFIN-AM 1330 in Toledo, Ohio. Chris Oaks spoke to Bruce about copyright law and electronic piracy. On November 13, 2003, Bruce Sunstein was interviewed by Dave Durian on WBAL 1090 about the future of compact discs. The Chicago Tribune quoted Lee Bromberg on October 29, 2003 in an article about China's problems with pirated and counterfeit goods. Lee Bromberg was quoted by Forbes Magazine on October 27, 2003 in an article about lawsuits alleging Chinese patent infringement. Tom Carey was quoted in an article about SCO's motion to dismiss Red Hat's lawsuit in MozillaQuest, The On-Line Computer Magazine on October 17, 2003. The San Jose Mercury News quoted Bruce Sunstein in an article regarding lawsuits filed by Visto against rival email firms on September 25, 2003. Bruce Sunstein was quoted in the Seattle Times on September 22, 2003. The article discusses the jury award in Eolas Technologies v. Microsoft. The Boston Globe quoted Lee Bromberg in an article regarding the patent infringement dispute between Gillette and Schick on August 30, 2003. Lee Bromberg was quoted by Electronic Business on August 28, 2003, in an article titled "Microtune Claims Permanent Injunction Against Broadcom." The Christian Science Monitor quoted Lee Bromberg in an article about the trademark dispute between Fox News and Al Franken on August 21, 2003. Lee Bromberg was quoted by the Hollywood Reporter on August 19, 2003, in an article titled "Fox, Franken Go To War Over Fair And Balanced." Tom Carey was quoted in the August 18, 2003 edition of InformationWeek Magazine regarding the conflict between SCO and GPL. Linux Today quoted Tom Carey in an article titled, "SCO vs. GPL: Luminaries Decry Legal Maneuver as 'Posturing'" on August 15, 2003. Bruce Sunstein was featured in the Boston Business Journal's Executive Profile on August 8, 2003. Click here to read the article. An interview with Tom Carey regarding SCO-Caldera's Amended Complaint and the SCO v. IBM lawsuit appeared on MozillaQuest.com on August 8, 2003. Quotes from the article are also featured by InformationWeek.com, InternetWeek.com, ITNewsAustralia.com, and CMP Asia. Financial Times and The Boston Globe quoted Tom Carey regarding the licensing dispute between SCO and Red Hat, Inc., on August 5 and August 6, 2003. Tom Carey was quoted by InternetNews.com on August 1, 2003 in an article titled "Attorneys: SCO v. IBM Remains Murky." The Los Angeles Times and CNETnews.com quoted Bruce Sunstein on July 16, 2003 regarding a recent ruling in the patent lawsuit against Microsoft brought by InterTrust. The Seattle Times quoted Bruce Sunstein in an article regarding the copyright lawsuit between Corbis and Amazon.com on July 7, 2003. Bruce Sunstein was interviewed for Boston Business Journal in an article about patent strategies for small business owners on June 30, 2003. InfoWorld Magazine and IT World Magazine quoted Bob Kann about the issue of reverse engineering in Bowers v. Baystate Technologies on June 26, 2003. The LA Times and Baltimore Sun quoted Bruce Sunstein in an article about NAPSTER on June 23, 2003. PC Magazine quoted Lee Bromberg on the subject of the legality of copying DVDs for archival purposes on June 17, 2003. Julia Huston was quoted in the April 11 - 17, 2003 issue of the Boston Business Journal in an article regarding how U.S. trademark owners may use the Madrid Protocol. AustraliaInternet.com and InternetNews.com quoted Bruce Sunstein in an article about MercExchange's patent infringement claim against eBay on May 30, 2003. CRN quoted Tom Carey in an article about the lawsuit between SCO Group and IBM on May 22, 2003. Linux.com quoted Tom Carey on the strategy of SCO Group in its lawsuit against IBM, May 19, 2003. On May 16, 2003, The Boston Business Journal interviewed Bob Kann in an article about Bromberg & Sunstein's petition to the US Supreme Court in Bowers v. Baystate. Pittsburgh Post Gazette quoted Lee Bromberg on the subject of the speed of research laboratories to file patent claims on SARS, May 12, 2003. BusinessWeek quoted Tom Carey on the subject of a lawsuit filed by SCO Group (formerly Caldera Systems, Inc.) against IBM alleging IBM misappropriated SCO software by contributing as open source code to the Linux operating system, on March 24, 2003. RCR Wireless News quoted Erik Belt in an article about recent developments in the Research In Motion, Ltd. v. NTP Inc. patent dispute, on February 28, 2003. Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly featured Ken Sachar, Charlton Shen and Shaun Montana in the 'On the Move' column, on February 17, 2003. CIO Magazine quoted Bruce Sunstein in an article about upcoming changes to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's effort to move to on-line services, on February 15, 2003. Lightreading.com quoted Lee Bromberg in an article about the Cisco v. Huawei infringement litigation case, on February 7, 2003. Ed Dailey appeared on WGBH channel 2's Greater Boston program on January 30, 2003 to discuss land use issues associated with a large mixed use development proposed for construction on Route 9 in Newton, MA. The Boston Globe quoted Bruce Sunstein in an article about the changes in filing patent applications for biotech companies, on January 29, 2003. Diagnostic Insight quoted Lee Bromberg at length on the subject of patent issues related to genomics research, in the Winter 2003 issue. BusinessWeek quoted Bruce Sunstein on the subject of the legal issues arising from 321 Studio's DVD copying program, on January 13, 2003. Reuters quoted Lee Bromberg on the subject of the Federal Circuit's decision in Amgen v. Hoescht (now Aventis) and TKT, on January 7, 2003. Investor's Business Daily quoted Bruce Sunstein on the subject of the increased importance for companies to manage their intellectual property, on January 3, 2003. Electronic Business quoted Bruce Sunstein on the subject of the Mentor v. Cadence patent infringement case, on January 1, 2003. 2002 InformationWeek quoted Bruce Sunstein on the subject of the aggressive enforcement of E-commerce patents, on December 16, 2002. Electronic News quoted Lee Bromberg in an article about the issues raised by the high demand for Wi-Fi technology, on November 11, 2002. Electronic Business quoted Bruce Sunstein in an article about protection of intellectual property, on November 1, 2002. Boston Magazine quoted Ed Dailey in an article about a dispute with the New York Times Company, in the November 2002 issue. Boston Business Journal quoted Bruce Sunstein in an article about 'bet-the-company' cases, on October 28, 2002. The Edmonton Sun quoted Bruce Sunstein in an article about the Director's Guild of America trademark counterclaim, on October 13, 2002. St. John's Telegram quoted Bruce Sunstein in an article about the Director's Guild of America trademark counterclaim, on October 12, 2002. Edmonton Journal quoted Bruce Sunstein in an article about the Director's Guild of America trademark counterclaim, on October 10, 2002. The Leader-Post quoted Bruce Sunstein in an article about the Director's Guild of America trademark counterclaim, on October 10, 2002. London Free Press quoted Bruce Sunstein in an article about the Director's Guild of America trademark counterclaim, on October 10, 2002. Ottawa Citizen quoted Bruce Sunstein in an article about the Director's Guild of America trademark counterclaim, on October 10, 2002. The Record.com quoted Bruce Sunstein in an article about the Director's Guild of America trademark counterclaim, on October 9, 2002. Wireless Week quoted Bruce Sunstein on the subject of the wireless internet, on October 7, 2002. Boston Magazine named Bruce Sunstein as one of the five best intellectual property lawyers in Boston, in the October 2002 issue. Boston Business Journal quoted Ed Dailey on the subject of a dispute between our client, a former Boston Globe editor, and the New York Times Company, on September 16, 2002. Alchemy quoted Bruce Sunstein on the subject of wireless fidelity, on September 13, 2002. CNET.com quoted Bruce Sunstein on the subject of internet service providers, on September 3, 2002. Report on Wireless quoted Bruce Sunstein at length on the subject of Wi-Fi service theft, on September 3, 2002. Drug Utilization Review published an article in the September 2002 issue in which Tim Murphy answered questions about the effect the recent passage of a bill by Congress would have on the patent process for brand-name and generic drug makers. Forbes quoted Bruce Sunstein on the subject of the eBay patent dispute, on August 16, 2002. The Boston Sunday Globe quoted Julia Huston in a lengthy article about a trademark dispute involving our client, Ken's Steak House, Inc., in the August 4, 2002 Globe West section. Telephony published an article by Bruce Sunstein entitled, "Copy Rites," on July 29, 2002. Boston Business Journal quoted Lee Bromberg on the subject of the dispute between generic and brand name manufacturers, on July 12, 2002. Massachusetts Lawyer's Weekly listed Bromberg & Sunstein as one of the largest intellectual property law firms in Massachusetts, on July 12, 2002. Current quoted Bruce Sunstein on the subject of NPR's linking policy, on July 8, 2002. The Boston Globe quoted Ed Dailey on the subject of degraded cable television and cable internet service to the Town of Duxbury, which the firm represents, and other Massachusetts south shore communities in the wake of the Adelphia Cable Communications bankruptcy, on June 20, 2002. Direct quoted Steve Saunders on the subject of an Internet coupon patent dispute, on June 1, 2002. Nation's Restaurant News quoted Julia Huston on the subject of a trademark dispute involving our client, Ken's Steak House, Inc., on May 20, 2002. Wireless Week quoted Bruce Sunstein on the subject of copyright issues related to wireless ringtones, on May 6, 2002. Boston Business Journal quoted Bob Asher on the subject of business method patents, on May 3, 2002. ABA Journal quoted Jay Sandvos on the subject of golf patents, in the May 2002 issue. MBA Lawyers Journal featured Ted MacVeagh in an article about part-time attorneys, in the May 2002 issue. Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly listed Bromberg & Sunstein as one of the 100 Largest Law Firms in Massachusetts, on April 22, 2002. Wired News quoted Bruce Sunstein on the subject of deep linking issues, on April 18, 2002. Bloomberg quoted Bruce Sunstein on the patent dispute between Schering-Plough and a group of generic drug manufacturers, on April 18, 2002. Boston Business Journal quoted Bruce Sunstein on the subject of the increased importance of intellectual property work to general practice law firms, on April 12, 2002. Wired News quoted Bruce Sunstein on the subject of PTO procedures, on April 11, 2002. The Feature quoted Bruce Sunstein on the subject of file sharing, on April 10, 2002. Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly quoted Julia Huston on the subject of a trademark dispute involving our client, Ken's Steak House, Inc., on March 25, 2002. MetroWest Daily News quoted Julia Huston on the subject of a trademark dispute involving our client, Ken's Steak House, Inc., on March 22, 2002. Wired News quoted Bruce Sunstein on the subject of hyperlinking technology, on February 14, 2002. Boston Business Journal quoted Erik Belt on the subject of a favorable outcome the firm won for a West Coast software company, on February 8, 2002. The case involves software-licensing matters. Newsbytes quoted Lee Bromberg on the subject of copyright law and the Internet, on February 7, 2002. 2001 Boston Business Journal quoted Julia Huston in an article about protecting brand reputations, on November 30, 2001. The Boston Globe quoted Ed Dailey on the subject of a lawsuit between our clients and developers concerning public rights of access to the harbor in the Charlestown Navy Yard, on November 26, 2001. Boston Business Journal quoted Lee Bromberg on the subject of business method patents, on April 27, 2001. Boston Business Journal quoted Lee Bromberg on the subject of the high demand for intellectual property attorneys, on April 27, 2001. |