• 10.05.17

    Ohlhausen Examines 'Informational Injury'

    Making good on her promise to focus on concrete consumer injury, Acting Chair of the Federal Trade Commission Maureen K. Ohlhausen announced a December workshop on “informational injury.”

  • 10.05.17

    Amazon Delivers Pricing Challenge to Arbitration

    Amazon successfully moved a putative class action challenging its pricing practices to arbitration after the U.S. Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit held that the retailer’s agreement was not unconscionable.

  • 10.05.17

    Comic-Con’s Copycat Convention Suit Moves Forward

    A jury will decide if the term “Comic-Con” is generic after a federal court judge in California recently denied summary judgment in favor of the trademark holders.

  • 10.02.17

    NLRB Upholds Retailer’s Rules on Confidential Customer Information

    Macy’s rules prohibiting the disclosure of confidential customer information didn’t violate Section 8 of the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), the majority of a panel of the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) determined, and employees would not reasonably construe the rules as ...

  • 09.28.17

    Misleading Labeling Suit Continues to Brew

    A putative class action alleging that Kona Brewing Co. tricked consumers into believing its beer line is locally brewed in Hawaii will move forward after a California federal court judge denied the advertiser’s motion to dismiss.

  • 09.28.17

    FTC Wields Shield Against False Participation Claims

    In the agency’s first cases enforcing the European Union-United States Privacy Shield framework, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) settled with three companies that falsely claimed they were certified to participate in the data-sharing agreement.

  • 09.28.17

    Equifax Data Breach Fallout Continues

    Just weeks after it was announced, the Equifax data breach has already resulted in multiple class action lawsuits, state attorneys general actions, and a renewed call to pass uniform, national data breach legislation.

  • 09.21.17

    Break Me Off a Piece of That Infringement Lawsuit

    Did Nestle’s recent advertising campaign for Kit Kat infringe the intellectual property rights of Atari?

  • 09.21.17

    Footlong Litigation to Continue, Despite Settlement Dismissal

    The saga over Subway’s “footlong” sandwiches will continue, a group of former plaintiffs vowed in a court filing after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit threw out a settlement agreement between the parties.

  • 09.21.17

    California Court Tosses Challenge to Gap Outlet Labels

    In a victory for outlet retailers, a California appellate panel recently tossed out a deceptive marketing and advertising suit against Gap.

manatt-black

ATTORNEY ADVERTISING

pursuant to New York DR 2-101(f)

© 2024 Manatt, Phelps & Phillips, LLP.

All rights reserved