Source: https://www.intercityexpress.news/home.cfm
Timestamp: 2019-04-26 10:32:35+00:00

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List of expenditures unavailable because financial data is scattered across 500 incompatible systems.
As the unemployment rate remains low, there may be more available jobs than qualified applicants to fill them. So, job-seekers are in high demand. One possible side effect of aggressive recruiting and rising wages is that employers are experiencing what is colloquially known as "ghosting."
If you're planning a wedding -- whether it's your own or your child's -- and haven't been paying close attention to the wedding industry, you may experience sticker shock as you begin calculating costs.
On March 25, 2018, the District Court in Nichia Corporation v. VIZIO, Inc., Case No. 8-16-cv-00545 (CACD 2019-03-25, Order), granted defendant's motion to preclude plaintiff's damages expert from testifying that plaintiff should recover, as compensatory damages, its costs incurred in a related Inter Partes Review (IPR) proceedings. The Court found such testimony would constitute an improper circumvention of 35 U.S.C. § 285's requirements for an attorney fee award.
The two most recent times I saw my friend Makoto Fujimura, he put a Kintsugi bowl in my hands. These ceramic bowls were 300 to 400 years old.
It can cost a half-million dollars more to build the same-size house in California as it does in Texas. The number of adults surprised by this is roughly zero.
Figuring out how to pay for college is like putting together a puzzle. At first, it can feel like all the pieces are jumbled in the box.
Bay Area lawmaker proposes a $3.5 million levy on estates to address "wealth inequality" for children.
Many employers use background investigations when making hiring, promotional, and similar decisions. The data made available by these investigations help the employer evaluate applicants in greater depth than an application and typical job interviews will allow.
The average American consumes roughly 200 pounds of meat a year. According to Jayson Lusk, an agricultural economist at Purdue University, Americans eat more meat per capita than citizens of almost any other country in the world, making them "the king of meat eaters." How did the United States achieve such a status? And what — if anything — should be done about it?
California needs fewer NIMBYs (not in my backyard), and more YIMBYs (yes in my backyard).
All have one or more leading research universities and a large proportion of college-educated people.
Josef Stalin dreamed of creating a totalitarian society where every individual's behavior could be predicted and controlled but he was born a century too early. He lived before the technology that would have made being a dictator so much easier!
Are patent applicants required to pay USTPO attorneys' salaries, win or lose?
The United States Supreme Court granted a writ of certiorari in Iancu v. NantKwest to determine whether a patent applicant, win or lose, must pay the salaries of the United States Patent and Trademark Office's ("USPTO") in-house attorneys in district court actions challenging the rejection of patent claims by USPTO patent examiners.
The initial stage in the first of the test cases arguing Monsanto's signature weedkiller causes cancer wrapped up on Tuesday with an attorney for the plaintiff again violating the judge's orders, this time by telling the jury to consider whether multiple factors contributed to the plaintiff's illness.
Dozens of people accused of having bought their children's way into elite colleges and universities.
SB 142: More lactation accommodations or just more litigation?
Proposed law may actually impede lactation accommodations for working mothers and promote litigation.
Two of the nation's largest telecommunications providers have asked the U.S. Supreme Court to intervene in lawsuits claiming they improperly refused to carry programs produced by an African-American owned production studio because of racial discrimination.
The bull market began 10 years ago. Why aren't more people celebrating?
The financial system had nearly collapsed. The deepest recession in decades was devouring over 700,000 jobs a month. Roughly $13 trillion in stock market wealth, slowly rebuilt since the dot-com bust, had again been incinerated.
TCJA offers tools and provisions for both commercial real estate and residential real estate investors.
This economist predicted the last crisis. What's the next one?
Raghuram Rajan is a professor of finance at the University of Chicago. Rajan's book called "The Third Pillar: How Markets and the State Leave the Community Behind." Its theme is the fragility of democracy — a fairly radical notion for an economist.
For several years leading up to 2018, the stock market was abnormally calm. Stocks had some ups and downs, but generally continued to march higher without much disruption.
A California federal judge ruled Wednesday that the Trump administration's proposed reinstatement of a citizenship question to the 2020 Census is illegal, further complicating a fraught issue by concurring with a New York judge on one claim while adding another.
Security excuses for gathering data increase our risk. They pile up and leach into unexpected places.
An Oakland federal judge on Monday struck down San Francisco County's use of money bail for those suspected of crimes but not yet charged as a "significant deprivation of liberty."
Tax the rich? Here's how.
Everyone, it seems, has ideas about new tax strategies, some more realistic than others. Whatever your politics, there is a bipartisan acknowledgment that the tax system is broken. Whether you believe the system should be fixed to generate more revenue or employed as a tool to limit inequality, there is a justifiable sense the public doesn't trust the tax system to be fair.
Permanent daylight saving time in California?
For decades, employers have used timekeeping practices that involve rounding, for example, rounding the employees' "punch time" up or down to the nearest tenth or quarter hour.
How much housing should the Bay Area have built?
The Bay Area should have added a million housing units since 2000, but only 380,000 units were built.
It's natural enough to see elite athletes as finely tuned machines. They're usually bigger, faster and stronger than the rest of us, and their movements can have a grace that appears nearly effortless. But if you talk to enough athletes and coaches, you discover that the mind, not the body, is where most of their energy is going.
After one of the longest bull markets in history, stocks experienced some major ups and downs toward the end of 2018.
Yesterday's marijuana is as different from today's as near-beer and a martini.
The early hearing may indicate where the court leans, but opponents of the move say their victory at the district court will be upheld.
Two banks announced the industry's biggest merger in a decade on Thursday, signaling bank executives' growing confidence that the regulatory constraints imposed after the 2008 financial crisis have begun to loosen.
Californians make up only 12 percent of the U.S. population, but 25 percent of the nation's homeless.
Andrew Yang was born in Schenectady, New York, to immigrant parents from Taiwan. Yang, now 44, studied economics and political science at Brown, got a law degree at Columbia and ultimately became a successful entrepreneur, with a focus on job creation. In the American dream sweepstakes, he was a pretty big winner. But along the way, he came to see that for every winner, there were thousands upon thousands of losers.
Advertisers and marketers once struggled to predict sales of such leisure products movies and books.
Taxing the wealthy sounds easy. It's not.
axing the wealthiest Americans at a higher rate may be good politics, since most voters won't be affected.
What is the demand for electric vehicles – really?
Technology has inspired new ways for investors to manage their finances -- often with added convenience and efficiency.
U.S. continues to allow Internet Service Providers to self-regulate with minimal external controls.
Employers require at least some employees to travel for business purposes. When hourly employees travel as part of the job, several employment law issues require attention.
The state government has caused trouble by stomping on private acts of kindness, like food sharing.
The Ford Motor Co. is ditching its legacy sedans, doubling down on trucks and trying to steer its stock price out of a long skid.
With nearly 53,000 federal inmates eligible for relief under the newly enacted First Step Act, the federal criminal justice law that eases mandatory minimums, a ruling from the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals may indicate the court's inclination to streamline the process, attorneys say.
Operating costs for the valley's tech startups as much as four times higher than in emerging tech hubs.
Former California Gov. Jerry Brown signed more than 1,000 new laws that go into effect this year.
If you stand to inherit a property, such as a family home or vacation condo, the gift presents a critical financial decision: whether to sell, rent or keep the home. And oftentimes, this decision is handled while dealing with the loss of a loved one.
What's the deal with the 'Green New Deal'?
The GND Plan recognizes that tackling climate change is going to be disruptive, hurting some people.
Employers enter into agreements with employees to settle threatened claims or litigation, and to resolve any potential claims, such as at the time of a layoff or discharge.
The demise of the iconic retailer is a sad for the company and those associated with it.
You probably want to be a good person. But you may also be completely self-absorbed. So you may be thinking, "There is no way I can be good if I'm also a narcissist. But how wrong you are!
A prominent economic story of the past year has been the growing tide of trade disputes across the globe.
OZ's offer preferential tax treatment when investing in economically distressed communities.
After he was sworn in as state attorney general Monday, Xavier Becerra took shots at his most frequent opponent in court: the Trump administration.
The potential fallout from an insincere apology can make the fallout from a crisis far worse.
The inauguration traditionally reflects the personal and governing style of the governor being sworn in.
This expert called the market plunge. Here's what he sees in 2019.
A year ago, in the wake of President Donald Trump's tax cut, euphoric investors pushed the Dow Jones industrial average past 25,000, a record.
The Trademark Trial and Appeals Board recently issued an interesting decision regarding standing to oppose the registration of trademark applications. United Trademark Holdings, Inc. filed for registration of the mark RAPUNZEL for use in conjunction with dolls and toy figures.
State and local budget woes ahead in 2019-20?
A quick glance at television commercials or online pop-up ads shows that rewards programs are the name of the game for many credit cards.
Do California residents have a 'right to shelter'?
Law students and professors have gone to Tijuana to advise asylum seekers on their options.
This fall, the California legislature responded to the #MeToo movement in a significant way.
Actors gain notoriety for different reasons. For some it's due to a physical characteristic or an iconic character portrayal.
Welcoming a child is an incredibly exciting time in your life.
The blocking of a pardon for a twice-convicted felon was a rare stumble in the governor's race to grant clemencies as his last term comes to an end.
Employers and the public understandably focus on workplace harassment claims arising from co-workers' or supervisors' conduct. However, an employer also may incur liability for unlawful workplace harassment perpetrated by an outsider, such as a customer or vendor.
Non-statutory, or obviousness-type, double patenting ("ODP") is a judicially created doctrine that prohibits an inventor from effectively extending the monopoly on a patented invention by applying for a later patent with claims that are not "patentably distinct" from the claims in the earlier patent. The core principle behind the doctrine is that "an inventor must fully disclose [the] invention and promise to permit free use of it at the end of [the] patent term." See Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corp. v. Breckenridge Pharmaceutical ("Breckenridge").
Just seven months before the scheduled release of a new technology system intended to simplify the repayment process for more than 35 million federal student loan borrowers, the Education Department is scrapping its plan and starting over.
Retired 1st District Court of Appeal Justice William A. Newsom III died Wednesday. He was 84.
Immigration leads to a wider variety of better products for the American consumer.
You've worked hard to accumulate your wealth and now want to share the fruits of your labor with your grandchildren.
Ruling allowing a much-needed pension reform would save California from fiscal disaster.
Recently, officials in California announced that the Camp Fire, the deadliest wildfire in the state's history, had been fully contained. The achievement was made possible through the hard work of firefighters on the ground, with some help from above: a swarm of tiny, orbiting satellites that represent the next phase of the space age.
What if President Trump's gut turns out to have been right and the Federal Reserve's interest rate increases are holding back the United States economy?
Every year about this time, I search the PTO database for any new patents on inventions related to Christmas. This year turned up several.
Stocks rose on Wall Street Monday after President Donald Trump and President Xi Jinping of China reached a truce in the countries' trade war.
Is the US a political duopoly?
Many people think the American political system is "broken" — but what if that's not true? The authors of a recent Harvard Business School report say that the Republican and Democratic parties constitute a duopoly: a wildly successful industry that has colluded to kill off competition, stifle reform and drive the country apart.
In University of Massachusetts Medical School et al v. L'Oreal SA et al, 1-17-cv-00868 (DED 2018-11-13, Order) (Sherry R. Fallon), the magistrate judge recommended granting a foreign parent company defendant's motion to dismiss plaintiffs' patent infringement action for lack of personal jurisdiction where its American subsidiary introduced the alleged accused products into the stream of commerce and the foreign defendant's corporate structure is not sufficient to establish personal jurisdiction because "mere ownership of a subsidiary does not justify the imposition of liability on the parent."
While still early in the regulatory process, Opportunity Zones are a boon for real estate investors.
Days after President Donald Trump attacked the impartiality of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, attorneys at the U.S. Department of Justice asked the nation's highest court to review an injunction blocking the government from implementing a ban on transgender soldiers in the military, effectively seeking to skip the very court Trump brazenly called a "complete and total disaster."
Wildfires: Global warming or forest husbandry?
Devastation caused by forest wild fires increasing, nowhere more so than in California.
As 2018 winds down, it's time to think about if and how you may be able to reduce the taxes owed on your next tax return.
Nonprofits should send fundraising communications on a day when they can be the star of the show.
The San Diego Padres recently took control of the Amarillo minor league baseball organization. The organization will serve at the Padres' Double A affiliate.
Retirement brings the end of a chapter in your career and the start of a new lifestyle. This unique transition can bring a myriad of emotions, most commonly ones of excitement and apprehension.
Without risk, there can be no innovation. The world of innovation is murky and uncertain. You must give people your permission to fail. Otherwise, they won't even try.
The attorney for a Black Lives Matter activist announced a plea deal hours ahead of a hearing on her motion to force the entire San Joaquin County district attorney's office to recuse itself from the case.
Aggressive NIMBY outlook and excessive regulation responsible for unaffordable housing.
The World Trade Organization is the referee for 164 member nations, each with their own political and economic agendas. Lately, those agendas have gotten more complicated, especially with President Donald Trump's tariff blitz. The modern global economy requires a delicate balance in which countries collaborate on trade while simultaneously competing against one another. This competition often requires a referee to make sure everyone's following the rules.
Federal regulations are the source of banking limitations on cannabis-related commerce.
Opportunity Zones aim to uplift low-income neighborhoods, while providing generous tax incentives.
his article is Part 2 of a two-part series providing an overview of laws affecting San Francisco employers.
We've all heard the same story: Our economy would be more dynamic if only the government would get out of the way. But Mariana Mazzucato, a professor of the economics of innovation and public value at University College London, says we've got that story backward.
Fourth Industrial Revolution, like all good revolutions, is disrupting social and economic structures.
Each year, employers offer an open enrollment period — a window of time to select your benefits package for the coming year.
UC Berkeley has signed master lease agreements at privately developed housing projects.
In recent years, the U.S. Supreme Court has considered a number of intellectual property and related cases, but many issues remain unresolved. Therefore, it is important to look both at the cases currently before the U.S. Supreme Court as well as those the Court chooses to let stand without further review.
The state Supreme Court wrongly takes away free choice of how individuals practice their occupation.
Rabbi Gavriel Price has thousands of years of Jewish religious law to draw on when he is on the job, determining whether a new food item can get a kosher certification from his organization, the Orthodox Union.
Debtors who file for bankruptcy protection are protected by the imposition of an automatic stay.
Seeing makeshift homes on sidewalks and freeway off ramps is not unusual in most parts of California. Tents can now be found on sidewalks where just a block away, two-bedroom homes easily sell for more than $1 million.
Community Choice Aggregators are taking California cities and counties storm.
Survey analysts on both sides defended their methodology studying pay-for-play's impact on consumer demand Monday in the potentially landscape-altering NCAA antitrust trial where student-athletes are fighting for a larger stake in the multi-billion dollar industry.
California's Tom Steyer is financing renewable fuels legislation across the country.
This article is Part 1 of a two-part series providing an overview of laws affecting San Francisco employers.
Partnerships and LLCs face dramatic changes in how audits are conducted.
A Mexican baseball team plays in Texas. It's a home game.
The national anthems of the United States and Mexico were played over the stadium speakers as the flags of both countries fluttered in the hot summer wind. Fans chatted away in English and Spanish. It was time for the Tecolotes de los Dos Laredos, the Owls of the Two Laredos, one of the oldest teams in Mexican baseball, to take the field here at Uni-Trade Stadium on the Texas side of the border. Except this was not an away game.
Those who take climate change and efforts to stop it seriously can arguably be divided into two broad camps: environmentalists and techno-optimists. The former believe that technology, population growth and overconsumption have led us to the brink of a disaster that only a dramatic change in lifestyles can avert. Techno-optimists, meanwhile, tend to believe that technology is as much the answer to our climate problems as the cause and that, ultimately, we can innovate our way out of the crisis. Mary Robinson, a former president of Ireland (the first woman to hold the position) and United Nations high commissioner for human rights most surely falls into the first camp.
For small business owners, managing the bottom line of their company is often a top priority.
Lisa Brennan-Jobs' memoir recounts life with (and without) father Steve Jobs.
Galderma Laboratories, LP et al v. Amneal Pharmaceuticals LLC et al, 1-16-cv-00207 (DED August 31, 2018, Order) (Stark, USDJ), Judge Stark of the District of Delaware recently found that a plaintiff was collaterally estopped from pursuing claims for patent infringement of two drug patents under a doctrine of equivalents theory based on a finding of no literal infringement in a prior case even though a doctrine of equivalents theory was not asserted in that case.
Lawmakers determined to root out sexual harassment in the Golden State.
Preserving trilateral trade best deal for the U.S.
NAFTA's trilateral composition is the heart, not a glitch of the original agreement.
Both of California's U.S. senators, Dianne Feinstein and Kamala Harris, sit on the Senate Judiciary Committee, both played starring roles in last week's confirmation hearings for Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, and both had personal political agendas.
As you may have heard, Scandinavians are a pretty happy bunch. Defining human happiness is a tricky, inherently subjective task. But we can probably all agree that it has something to do with a combination of material well-being, physical and mental health, personal security and strong social ties.
There's no question that Social Security is a cornerstone of retirement income for many Americans.
Is blue state California's agenda America's future?
What policies the rest of the country needs to reject to avoid falling into the California trap.
Procter & Gamble, the international consumer packaged goods conglomerate, recently filed a slew of trademark applications with the United States Patent and Trademark Office, seeking to register WTF, LOL, FML, and NBD for use in conjunction with certain consumer goods.
Women are making progress in executive and senior level management, but still lag behind men.
President Donald J. Trump has nominated Phoenix-based Magistrate Judge Bridget Shelton Bade to an Arizona seat on the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, ending a two-year deadlock between the state's senators and the White House in negotiations to find a suitable nominee.
When it comes to employment, a felony conviction is more damaging than imprisonment.
Helping public housing residents to overcome their dependence on the government.
The school shootings at Virginia Tech and Sandy Hook; the massacres at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, Florida, and outside the Mandalay Bay hotel in Las Vegas; the terrorist attacks during the Boston Marathon. After each of these tragedies, someone has a thankless, brutally difficult job to do: determine how the available compensation money should be distributed to the victims and their families. That someone is usually Kenneth Feinberg, along with his small Washington law firm.
Labor Day is a testament to America's high esteem for hard work.
Often, it's just the case of another business with the same name having registered that account first.
The long-running legal dispute between the Commission on Judicial Performance and the state auditor could be nearing its conclusion, thanks in part to a pair of bills now advancing through the Legislature.
Permissionless innovation fomented by competitive free markets best guarantees consumer welfare.
Lance Armstrong was once one of the most lionized athletes on the planet. Then, in 2012, it all fell apart. During a television interview with Oprah Winfrey he admitted to using erythropoietin, or EPO. Stephen Dubner recently chatted with Armstrong about that infamous interview and how the years since have changed him.
What does a beer company do to hedge against slowing growth in its main business?
First of three guidances describe the transition tax on controlled foreign corporations.
California law protects employers from lawsuits based on negative employment references given without malice. Therefore, employers lawfully may communicate with other employers about their current or former employees' performance, reasons for separation, and more.
Opportunity to embed AI and machine learning into a company's internal operational processes.
High-Speed Rail remains necessary to the Golden State's transportation future.
Educating your adult children on the importance of saving for retirement may be a bit challenging in the short run if they're not receptive to the message, but it may do them a world of good if they accept your advice.
A meaningless vote that does nothing to reunite migrant children with their parents.
Is there room for a third party? If some independent mounted a presidential bid in 2020, would that person have a chance? Those are questions we won't be able to answer for a few years.
The Legislature reconvened this week for the inevitably hectic final weeks of its annual session. The pressure cooker atmosphere that always envelops the final days is, history tells us, not conducive to thoughtful policymaking.
Nine years into this recovery, annual economic growth has been rather tepid at an average of 2.2%.
For decades, the district south of downtown and alongside San Francisco Bay here was known as either Rincon Hill, South Beach or South of Market. This spring, it was suddenly rebranded on Google Maps to a name few had heard: the East Cut. The peculiar moniker immediately spread digitally, from hotel sites to dating apps to Uber, which all use Google's map data.
Conflicts continue over subpoenas and information obtained during the newsgathering process.
Starting up with 12 employees, Intel is today the world's second-largest maker of semiconductors.
You wouldn't think that you could win a Nobel Prize for showing that humans tend to make irrational decisions. But that's what Richard Thaler did in 2017. Stephen Dubner recently spoke to Thaler about how institutions and firms are now practicing what he has been preaching, often to quite substantial success.
California's move away from retrogressive politics?
No matter your life stage or financial situation, it's important to have insurance in place to provide for your loved ones. Make it a priority to regularly review your coverage and ensure it covers the changing needs of your family.
Network of urban air vehicles will alleviate transportation congestion on the ground.
The lawsuit has put $2 billion in funding on hold, and the state Legislature hopes to partially break the logjam with a November ballot initiative.
Dan Doctoroff, a successful investment banker in New York spearheaded a massive effort to bring the Olympics to the city in 2012.Though the bid failed, it helped catalyze dramatic development throughout New York as a result of extensive rezoning efforts.
Creating a well-crafted financial plan will help you achieve your goals.
Conor McGregor's presence in the business world is just as polarizing as his presence in the sports and entertainment world.
Today's housing market is creating more and more hurdles for homebuyers.
Shortly after my previous employer suddenly laid me off. I was grateful to be employed again so quickly — but I quickly realized this new job wasn't for me. Given how I was treated at my last company, I didn't think I'd ever feel allegiance to an employer again. Is it acceptable to consider leaving so soon?
Intellectual freedom: Must libraries be neutral?
While neutrality doesn't mean that we don't have values, it must mean that we are not partisan.
Today's real estate industry relies heavily on the use of websites displaying photographs of properties for sale to entice buyers. Many of the photographs on these sites are taken by professional photographers who license the use of their photos and retain the copyrights to them. The Ninth Circuit was faced with the question of whether these photographers can maintain an action for copyright infringement against a company whose software apparently "scrubbed" metadata identifying the copyright holders of photographs on various real estate websites.
Artificial intelligence a power tool we're just beginning to understand.
Couples who don't have children tend to have more financial flexibility to pursue their own goals throughout life and in retirement. But this flexibility doesn't mean they don't need to manage their future financial, health and legacy needs.
While many animals are afforded various protections by the rule of law, photos taken by some do not have the risk of liability for copyright infringement.
Politicians are misusing trailer bills, meant to implement the state budget, to enact far-reaching policies that have virtually nothing to do with the budget, and without any of the traditional safeguards, such as waiting periods and public hearings.
The long-term health of the nation's economy is tied to the real interest rate.
Pharmaceutical firms donate an enormous amount of their products. Pfizer, for example, donated $4.7 billion in medicines in 2017. And yet all that generosity doesn't seem to be helping its reputation. According to Gallup, only about a third of Americans hold a positive view of the pharma industry, which makes it nearly as unpopular as the federal government.
An employment dispute between minor league baseball players and the sport's national governing body unfolded before the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Wednesday, as a three-judge panel wrestled with choice of law issues presented in a class action for alleged wage violations.
In a nearly unanimous decision, the justices ruled Monday that tolling provisions that allow plaintiffs to bring individual lawsuits after relevant statutes of limitations periods pass if a previous attempt at class certification fails do not apply to subsequent tries at class-wide complaints.
A proposed $500,000 cut to the agency failed to make it into Gov. Jerry Brown's final budget.
As the legal field tries to keep pace with medical advancements, complicated and interesting cases arise.
Sunday is not my favorite hour to discuss home-improvement projects with a prospective contractor, but there I was, eagerly showing this one my basement. He seemed promising, spending almost two hours in my basement. All I had to do now was wait for his bid. I eagerly opened the email only to find a half-page proposal with scant information, just a vague bullet list with a dollar sum at the bottom. When I asked for more detail and references, I never heard from him again. My experience is not uncommon among homeowners looking to hire tradespeople.
Can Joel Embiid block the Buffalo Bills' attempt to register "Respect the Process"? And better yet, if he can, will he?
Gig economy a magnet for many unemployed and underemployed millennials.
Many proposals on this week's ballot will raise local taxes directly, or indirectly through issuance of bonds that would require higher property taxes to repay.
The nation's highest gasoline taxes force California drivers to pay sky-high pump prices.
The California Supreme Court's recent decision in Dynamex v Lee changes the way businesses evaluate their employee classifications.
These days, more and more businesses are giving back. Corporate social responsibility programs — in which companies donate to educational institutions, or help protect the environment, or strip child labor from their supply chains, or do any number of world-improving things — are all the rage in global C-suites. So why has CSR become so popular? It can't simply be that the world's business titans woke up one day and decided to make the world a better place.
There are steps you can take to feel more financially confident regardless of your age and current health status.
More than 200 identified faults in California are considered very dangerous.
FDA citizen petition abuse is an instrumental anti-competitive tool that pharmaceutical companies use to delay market entry of generic drugs, an empirical study demonstrates.
Union official time constitutes a direct government subsidy to federal employee unions.
The U.S. high court's recent sports betting ruling is sure to cause a flurry of activity in state legislatures across the country.
Consider the benefits of working another year or more before retirement.
Too often, political tactics are based on the cynical assumption that voters can be easily fooled and the current election season is, unfortunately, rife.
Controversial 5-4 majority decision was authored by Justice Neil Gorsuch.
The Trump administration is working on an agreement with China so the country can purchase more US goods and shrink the trade gap.
Too stupid to make our own housing decisions?
California's new rooftop solar mandate will add approximately $12,000 to the cost of a new home.
Freelance professionals have unique opportunities and challenges when it comes to creating a viable path to financial security.
Safer roads: An unexpected benefit of the independent contractor ruling?
When the California Supreme Court ruled that many independent contractors must be reclassified as employees, it may have unintentionally paved a path toward greater safety on the state's roads and highways.
U.S. and China slouching toward a trade war?
Many patent owners feel that alleged infringers have an unfair advantage under the current system that applies different claim construction standards for different forums.
Gov. Jerry Brown is strangely unwilling to even try to save the state budget from the existential threat posed by an insanely unbalanced tax system, even though he acknowledges the fiscal peril.
Tesla: a newcomer, a game changer... a financial disaster?
This month, Tesla released its 2018 first quarter financials, with horrid results. In the first three months of the year, Tesla managed to lose another $784 million.
Study finds toxic contaminants in 20 out of 20 samples at "licensed" marijuana dispensaries.
Atul Gawande is an extraordinarily busy man, even for a doctor. Not only is he a surgeon, but he's also a health policy professor at Harvard, an executive director at Ariadne Labs, and a staff writer at The New Yorker. Gawande recently found time to chat with Stephen Dubner about how we can improve health care and how he gets it all done each day.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions requested friend-of-the-court briefs in March relating to an asylum case on whether suffering from "private criminal activity" made someone part of a particular social group that is eligible for asylum in the U.S.
A new guidebook for communications professionals when a fast moving crisis hits.
The Phillippine Supreme Court has voted to remove the Chief Justice of the court in what some are calling a "black day for justice."
For many investors, cash helps protect a portion of income against market volatility and provides the ability to generate a competitive return.
Lower immigration and birth rates have caused a decline in California's population growth.
California's economy has climbed in global rankings to 5th place behind only the United States as whole, China, Japan and Germany.
The new reality in California is that cannabis interests have become a formidable lobbying force.
Here's one to check off your bucket list of ponderables: If you engage in an intentional act that results in an unintended accident, is it an really an accident?
While using independent contractors gives companies an edge, California's high court said it was an unfair competitive advantage.
In theory, millions of borrowers are eligible to have their debts forgiven after a decade of public-service work. In practice, the program has produced a litany of frustrations. But there is at least one person who has made the 120 qualifying payments and now has a zero balance as a result, thus joining a very small club of the forgiven.
For an increasing number of investors, investing is not just about selecting opportunities that do well in their portfolio. It's about owning investments that also make a positive social impact.
Businesses across the world are bracing for the impact of the new European Union data-protection regulation, known as the GDPR, which comes into effect on May 25.
Who will control land use in California?
The death of far-reaching—even revolutionary—legislation to facilitate housing development crystallized a conflict that's been simmering in California for decades: Who controls land use?
The New Frontier of Innovation: How Will Law Firms Fare?
When we begin to think about how to maintain a thriving legal practice that is being outpaced by artificial intelligence, automated on-line legal services, and lawyer "robots," the first question that hits us is, where do we even begin? Below we suggest a roadmap for addressing what is arguably the biggest challenge the legal industry has faced in its history.
Ren Ventures argues that Lucasfilm doesn't have common law trademark rights to SABACC card game because it failed to use the game in a trademark manner.
Voters often make snap judgments based on ideological predispositions and unpredictable events that unfold during campaigns, what those in politics call "x-factors."
What is the one thing that sets humans apart from all other animals? Some say it's our innate curiosity; some say our language. Others say it's our culture. Our capacity for trade — our ability to create markets and respond rationally to supply and demand — would seem an obvious, and particularly strong, candidate for what make us human. And yet research suggests that economic activity isn't as uniquely human as we might imagine.
California labor laws generally discourage overtime work by requiring employers to pay a premium for extra work hours.
A recent decision will likely instigate a sea change regarding how family law trials and motions are litigated.
California's public employee pension systems have immense gaps between what they have in assets and what they will need to meet their obligations to retirees.
The Supreme Court left intact a system created by Congress in 2011 that has been used by potential patent infringers to challenge and invalidate thousands of patents.
Legislators failed to close a loophole that would have allowed various aides under them to unionize and more effectivley fight the various harassment scandals that plague the Capitol.
In light of the recent US-China trade dispute, various Chinese companies are facilitating alternate shipping routes through other countries in hopes of circumventing new tariffs.
The lieutenant governor has few, if any, substantive duties other than take over if a governor dies or resigns.
Political oddsmakers have pegged Bakersfield Congressman Kevin McCarthy and the No. 3 GOP leader, whip Steve Scalise of Louisiana, as the two contenders for speaker of the House of Representatives.
There's a mountain of evidence suggesting that the quality of our relationships has been in steady decline for decades. Over the past five years, loneliness, suicide rates and depression have abruptly gotten worse.
Cybercrime damage will reach $6 trillion by 2021, nearly 10 percent of the global economy.
Women often face unique challenges when it comes to managing their finances. If you are a woman working to build your financial confidence today and tomorrow, understanding key challenges is the first step to overcoming them.
The Supreme Court has not approved of any such standard. Even in the 9th Circuit, the award must be "completely irrational."
The U.S. has been the indisputable world leader in disruptive innovations in the internet age.
The Ninth Circuit recently revisited the issue of the applicability of the safe harbor provision of the Digital Millenium Copyright Act ("DMCA").
The IRS received more than 94.1 million individual returns between Jan. 29 and March 30.
The California Chamber of Commerce published its annual "job killer" list of bills it wanted to block. 24 bills made the list.
Last summer, Stephen Dubner had the opportunity to chat with arguably the most heavily scrutinized chief executive in the United States: Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg. Even before Americans and the world learned that data from an estimated 87 million Facebook users had been weaponized by political operatives, and before the 33-year-old CEO sat down for a two-day grilling session from an irate Congress, Zuckerberg was feeling the heat.
President Donald Trump's Republican administration in Washington and California's Democratic politicians in Sacramento are clearly looking for opportunities to do battle in the media and in the courts.
How is the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act affecting M&A?
When evaluating the act's impact on mergers and acquisitions, corporate and pass-through entity provision changes must also be evaluated in the context of even more complex international ones that could affect a transaction.
In 2017, Customs and Border Patrol recorded the lowest level of illegal cross-border migration on record.
Market volatility does not always mean you need to make changes to your portfolio. There are things you can do to prevent fear from getting the best of you.
California is experiencing what educators call an "achievement gap."
The Supreme Court should grant certiorari in this case to correct the 9th Circuit's misapplication of the market participation doctrine and affirm that states and local governments may not substitute their judgment on labor policy for that of Congress.
Two new employment laws have expanded parental leave rights with the chance that the new regulations could expand compliance obligations.
A discussion of a few of the most common aspects of patent law that are misunderstood.
There are a variety of ways grandparents can help their grandchildren financially in the pursuit of a college degree.
There are four types of intellectual property protection, and it is important to understand the distinctions between them to keep your business safe.
Sacramento is no stranger to protest marches and other forms of political expression. However, the city has never experienced anything as emotionally powerful as the almost daily marches and rallies to condemn the city police shooting death of 22-year-old Stephon Clark.
A ballot measure in San Francisco would require the city to fund and run a program to provide tenants facing eviction with full-scope representation by an attorney regardless of income or means.
SB 306, effective January 1, 2018, expanded the California Department of Labor Standards Enforcement's authority to investigate wage law violations, without a worker-filed complaint. The federal government has stepped up immigration laws enforcement. Many inspections occur with little to no notice. Therefore, management should learn their rights and obligations.
Californians have a constitutional right to hold and express beliefs that may be in the political minority, even if they are misguided, without that right being diluted or violated by state legislators.
I have read with interest, and a sense of bemusement, headlines about the 9th Circuit's decision in much-watched copyright infringement case.
As the U.S. Supreme Court ponders compelled payment of agency fees, labor unions prepare for the outcome.
Over the past few years, voters in hundreds of California cities and other local governments were asked to pass tax increases, and indications are that another big batch of local tax measures will be on this year's ballots.
Donors to campaign groups don't always get what they want.
The 9th Circuit in Hall v. Swift found the allegedly infringed phrases of the song in question to be "too brief, unoriginal and uncreative to warrant protection under the Copyright Act" and provided Hall and Butler leave to amend their complaint.
High-speed train system linking the northern and southern regions of the state looks like a solution in search of a problem, rather than a vital transportation system.
Americans have spent much of the past decade wondering when the economy would recover from the crippling Great Recession. Now, they are considering another question: When, and how, will that recovery end?
Arizona officials saw opportunity when Uber and other companies began testing driverless cars a few years ago. On Sunday night, an autonomous car operated by Uber — and with an emergency backup driver behind the wheel — struck and killed a woman on a street in Tempe, Arizona. It was believed to be the first pedestrian death associated with self-driving technology.
Dropbox, the online file storage company, is poised to hold one of the year's most highly awaited stock market debuts. But whether investors think the technology darling is more valuable as a publicly traded company or as a privately held start-up is debatable.
As of February 5, 2018, California Assembly Bill 403 imposes stiff consequences on members of the legislature or employees who interfere with an employee's right to make a protected disclosure.
Switching employers can have a substantial impact on your financial life. Four tips to help keep your finances on track through the transition.
U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas finds defendants have not committed acts of infringement sufficient to establish venue.
At the June election, four public defenders hope to unseat four judges simply because they were appointed by a Republican governor.
U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions says he is suing the state to overturn three laws aimed at helping millions of undocumented immigrants avoid deportation.
Republicans are exploiting the Democratic Party's abject lack of discipline and gaming California's top-two primary system to potentially block Democratic challengers from reaching the November ballot.
Google currently has multiple lawsuits filed against it by former employees alleging that the companies' diversity practices are both too disruptive and too ineffective.
Taxing motorists and spending the money on transportation improvements is the right thing to do. Claiming overblown economic benefits is the wrong thing to do.
The gender pay gap is a phenomenon prevalent all over the world and when adjusted for discriminatory factors, the reasons for its existence become less clear with some differences attributed to small but important variance in each gender's behavior.
Capitalize on the benefits of having an ownership stake in your employer's firm while maintaining a well-diversified portfolio.
So far, electing a new governor of California has resembled a game of musical chairs.
The on-sale bar can be raised as a defense in patent infringement litigation.
The lesson of AB 1687 is that politicians shouldn't be star-struck by Hollywood and they shouldn't erode constitutional rights regardless of the supposed worthiness of their motives.
California's commission process for redistricting isn't perfect, but it's one that other states should emulate.
When Google agreed to buy Zagat for $151 million nearly seven years ago, the technology giant intended to bring the restaurant review empire into the digital age. Now ownership of Zagat will change again — into the hands of an upstart restaurant review company that has harnessed smartphone apps, an Instagram hashtag and a texting recommendation service as parts of its path to growth.
For now, unless I have reason not to do so, all incumbent judges have my vote.
President Donald Trump has announced potential tariffs on all steel and aluminum imports from every country around the world. Various European countries responded on Friday with threats of retaliation and many countries argue that such tariffs would end up harming both all parties rather than just helping the United States.
The Delaware Supreme Court recently held that director compensation awards made pursuant to discretionary compensation plans are not to be afforded review under the deferential business judgment rule.
Vapor intrusion can be an issue at industrial properties, suburban strip malls and residential developments.
If a patent only covers a component of a product that a defendant in a patent infringement case has sold, the plaintiff must apportion damages between the patented component and the whole product. The plaintiff is only entitled to a reasonable royalty on the patented component, not on the whole product.
The U.S. economy appears to be performing very well. It is in the best shape that it has been in since the crisis.
Never judge the true tenor of a political party by what happens at its convention. Last weekend's Democratic gabfest was a case in point.
There are many situations in which employers are obligated to give their employees time off from work. The California Family Rights Act has expanded the class of employers to include small business, so it is always pertinent to check and see which forms of leave are protected before coming to a conclusion.
A recent federal court ruling and a case recently argued before the California Supreme Court are the most recent installments in the ongoing effort to reconcile employee classification with the gig economy.
In 1994, Indra Nooyi joined PepsiCo as a chief strategist; 12 years later, she was named its CEO. Today, she oversees 260,000 global employees and a snack empire that includes Frito-Lay chips, Tropicana juices, Quaker foods and of course lots of soda.
With market performance where it is, it may make sense to review your portfolio and determine if changes are appropriate.
It looks like Gavin Newsom and Antonio Villaraigosa will be the June primary election's top two vote-getters and will face each other in November for the governorship.
Recently, the Polish government has come under fire for proposing legislation that would criminalize equating the Poles' complicity with Nazis' crimes.
Certain claims are not patentable under 35 U.S.C. §101. If claims are well-understood, routine, and conventional they might not be eligible for patent.
Many have criticized Proposition 57 as too vaguely drafted and too broad. Now, the CDCR must either rewrite the regulations or try to overturn a recent ruling by Sacramento County Superior Court Judge Allen Sumner.
Client agencies – cities, particularly – were already complaining that double-digit annual increases in CalPERS payments were driving some of them towards insolvency and the new policy, which will kick in next year, will raise those payments even more.
The complaint that Stone Brewing filed in District Court against MillerCoors epitomizes the fight between craft brewers and "Big Beer." It will be interesting to see how it plays out.
History's ultimate "bar exam question" is the fact pattern in United States v. Libellants of the Schooner Amistad, the U.S. Supreme Court's first civil rights case.
The most sweeping tax reform legislation in decades was enacted into law at the end of 2017. If you pay federal income taxes, you are likely to see an impact this year.
Thinking even the most offensive thought is still private. With any other expression, all bets are off.
GOP grants a liberal fiscal wish. The left has misgivings.
Suing oil companies for causing climate change has become a popular exercise in California's coastal communities. However, winning in court is another matter, and by just filing the actions, California governments may be risking their ability to borrow money at low rates.
Renewal of Sacramento's expiring half-cent tax would cover perhaps half of the projected increase in annual pension costs, but crowd out other services the tax now finances. Were voters to double it to a full cent, virtually every new dollar it generated would be needed to pay increased CalPERS demands.
Proposition 50, a constitutional amendment that voters approved in the June, 2016, primary election, empowers legislative houses, by a two-thirds vote, to suspend without pay, members who either face criminal charges or are deemed to have breached the public trust.
Some common issues employers may encounter during and after a natural disaster, including paying employees, handling leave requests, and managing safety concerns.
Declaring that it was "time for a reality check," Assemblyman Jim Patterson asked for an emergency audit of the project in December.
Where do the best CEO's come from?
Should we go with an insider or an outsider? This is among the central questions that companies ask themselves when choosing a new chief executive.
When the evidence shows that an ISP fails to enforce the terms of its own policy in any meaningful fashion, that ISP has not "reasonably implemented" a repeat copyright infringer policy.
While talking about the sensitive topic of your parents' long-term financial goals may seem uncomfortable, addressing it sooner rather than later can help eliminate challenges and uncertainty down the road.
Filing public nuisance suits against oil companies for making and distributing fossil fuels is not the right way to fashion intelligent environmental policy.
Agencies are increasingly finding small errors in the reports and assessing significant penalties — they consider these paperwork errors as grave as harmful emissions and an affront to the integrity of the regulatory program.
Misconduct complaints involving senior military leaders increased 13 percent from 2015 to 2017.
The expansion is proceeding at a good pace, unemployment is low, and inflation is finally headed in the right direction again.
One of California's most complex and unusual financial/political/legal conflicts was settled last week, but the deal left a couple of mysteries.
It's hypocritical for the Legislature to exempt itself from the laws and procedures it imposes on others, as the firestorm over sexual harassment underscores. If would-be miscreants know that their behavior can be reported and revealed to the public, they'll be much less likely to do it.
Enactment of new employment laws require California employers to make significant changes in their hiring practices and workplace policies.
Will Congress rein in out-of-control Pentagon budget?
Let me just start by saying I grew up in a military family. I am a military brat.
We've all had the feeling that our workplace would completely crumble in our absence. It's rarely true. So at least consider the possibility that the organization will muddle along happily without you.
It may make sense to use both active and passive investments to effectively build and manage a diversified portfolio.
A Riverside case involves the right of people with developmental disabilities to marry as well as the right not to be pressured into marriage through undue influence.
The water tunnel and high-speed rail projects that Jerry Brown has touted are plagued by problems.
These companies are at the forefront of America's economic growth.
While not all software-based innovations are patent eligible, it is clear that some are. Therefore, it is imperative to take into account recent court decisions when drafting the specifications and claims for such inventions.
Governor Jerry Brown punctuated his State of the State address with lists of what he clearly regards as major accomplishments. Does his work qualify for a commendable legacy?
Los Angeles and San Francisco are suddenly in the throes of turmoil as they search for new leaders.
the California Legislature just amended the California Family Rights Act so that small businesses will be subject to part of its provisions.
A recent case out of the Ninth Circuit, Oracle USA, Inc. v. Rimini Street, Inc. (July 13, 2017), illustrates some of the risks third party software vendors run concerning copyright issues.
If you expect to receive a refund on your 2017 tax return, will you save or spend it? While you may be tempted to indulge, consider using the money to solidify your long-term financial position.
Children in California's K-12 public school system trail badly in educational accomplishment.
Giant tech firms like Google spend a lot of money on political lobbying and are attempting to shape the public policy debate through support of a wide variety of think tanks and nonprofit groups.
Attorney General Xavier Becerra is imploring the U.S. Supreme Court to validate laws in California and other states requiring public employees who are not union members to nevertheless pay "agency fees" to unions.
Is it the end of deal litigation as we know it?
The SEC's recent Compliance and Disclosure Interpretation regarding Regulation G should bring an end to one popular claim that has proliferated in the post-Trulia world.
These cases deal with the statutory interpretation of the Dodd-Frank Act and its whistleblower protections, the jurisdictional reach of state courts in certain securities class actions, and separation of powers issues related to the appointments clause of the U.S. Constitution.
Effective January 1, 2018, employers are subject to new state law requirements related to federal officials' access to employees and documents. Employers must carefully walk the line between complying with federal immigration law, and state law prohibiting "too much" cooperation.
Should Legislature's employees be unionized?
Collective bargaining for California's public employees may have been a questionable idea. But it's not going away and there's absolutely no reason why Capitol workers, except for a small cadre of senior staffers, should not have civil service status and unionization, if they wish.
With passage of an infrasture bill, growth in the construction industry could reach unprecedented levels.
What can we expect to see as the marijuana industry continues to ramp up? An increase in impaired driving crashes, more teens and young adult addicts, more psychotic breaks and violence related to marijuana, and even more arrests.
Everybody agrees society is in a bad way, but what exactly is the main cause? It could be the failure of liberal democracy.
In practice, Gov. Jerry Brown has not always adhered to the principle of "subsidiarity," but has been particularly stubborn about applying it to the state's six-million-student public education system, rejecting demands of education reformers for more state intervention on behalf of "high-needs" students.
Controversial political issues like immigration are often complex, presenting the public with a range of options from which to choose. Absent narrow exceptions, courts may not reject the product of the democratic process and substitute their own preferred policy.
While email is often used to send important information and documents, it is by no means a foolproof method of communication for attorneys.
Is the Sheriff's Department the only office with records?
Sheriff's Department and DA's office files are worthy of review and disclosure.
A look at two major figures in the California Legislature can teach a lesson about human behavior.
The Federal Circuit just reversed itself in holding that patent owners can now appeal a decision by the Patent Trial and Appeal Board finding that a challenger's petition for inter partes review (IPR) is timely.
According to a 584-page report, released this month by the federal government, California committed gross negligence in the construction and maintenance of the nation's highest dam, Oroville.
Gov. Jerry Brown is concerned that the new federal tax overhaul encourages the few thousand Californians with the highest incomes, whose taxes allow Brown and other California politicians to spend tens of billions of dollars a year, to take their money elsewhere.
The U.S. District Court issued an opinion in TCL Communications v. Ericsson and determined Ericsson did not offer to license its standard essential patents on reasonable terms, and instead become only the fourth U.S. Court to determine a royalty rate for essential patents.
On Wednesday, Brown proposed the 16th and final budget of his record-long gubernatorial career. It totals $190.3 billion, but according to staff, would spend roughly the same percentage of Californians' personal income as it did 43 years ago, a bit less than 8 percent.
Purchasing a business comes with numerous financial considerations. There are steps to consider before signing on the dotted line.
hen you buy tickets to a big concert, a professional sports event or a hot Broadway play — on a scale of 1 to 10 — how would you rate the ticket-buying experience? Think about everything from the price to the availability of tickets to the transparency of the whole transaction. The public has almost no chance to buy good tickets to the best events.
Sen. Kamala D. Harris, D-California, was appointed to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday.
The Democratic supermajority is in trouble in California. What will happen?
2017 was the year Twitter commandeered politics.
Ways to stay motivated to achieve financial goals.
Part 2 of a two-part series providing an overview of new California employment laws.
A federal judge overseeing the ineffective counsel claim of a man convicted a decade ago of terrorism charges has denied a government motion to kick the defendant's lead attorney off the case.
The fate of Nicola Hanna, the new interim U.S. Attorney for the Central District, and California's other new federal prosecutor remains unclear because the Trump administration has not officially nominated them.
For years, an "Equity Coalition" of civil rights and education reform groups has battled the state's education establishment – state schools Superintendent Tom Torlakson, the state Board of Education and the California Teachers Association, most notably – over how the "achievement gap" should be addressed.
There are nearly 700,000 individuals with DACA in the United States, approximately 220,000 of whom live in California.
Saving for retirement should be a top financial priority. It's worth it to commit to saving today.
The twin ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach have become vital economic powerhouses.
Home for the holidays after passing the eighth-largest tax cut in U.S. history, Republicans could be forgiven for reveling in the warm embrace of nostalgia. Ronald Reagan's first State of the Union address promised the biggest tax cut ever to "expand our national prosperity, enlarge national incomes and increase opportunities for all Americans". Republicans are proving notably more reluctant to acknowledge the true impact of the tax changes that Reagan wrought.
The wisest course would be to restrain spending in the next state budget and squirrel away as much money as possible. However, the Legislature is dominated by liberal Democrats who fervently believe that more spending is a godly virtue.
Investors have increasingly turned to international stocks and bonds to diversify their portfolio over the long term. There are considerations to keep in mind.
After selecting a strong trademark, there are many things a trademark owner can do to strengthen and protect a trademark but one of the essential things it must do is to force infringers to stop infringing.
Our country has faced some tough times. I don't have to tell you about that. And for too long, year after year, more and more Americans gave up hope.
Making California the first state to guarantee health care for every resident has become a touchstone issue – and a divisive one – for the state's dominant Democrats. The state Assembly will take up – or possibly ignore – a universal health care bill that the Senate passed this year.
A first-time chief executive, was barely a year into a turnaround effort at Marvell Semiconductor when he sold its board on a bold move: a $6 billion offer to purchase Cavium, another midsize maker of computer chips.
While California's economy is largely driven by Silicon Valley's digital innovation, its state government in Sacramento, just 100 miles northeast, has abysmally failed to use that technology effectively.
California, which had led the nation in cracking down on crime in the 1980s and 1990s by locking up tens of thousands of felons, has dramatically reversed course in the last half-decade.
The holidays can be a wonderful time for families and friends to gather together, sharing memories and gifts. This season can also provide the opportunity to instill the value of giving to others in your child.
I was wrong about bitcoin. Here's why.
I wanted to understand the phenomenon for myself. So in 2013, I bought a single bitcoin.
These important considerations make how fuel economy is regulated relevant to every auto dealer in America and their customers.
December is a great time to review your finances and get ready for a fresh start in the new year. Five key financial moves are worth reviewing before year end.
Politicians ensnared in the harassment scandal can affect the Legislature's delicate balance of power.
Whether your children are getting ready for kindergarten or graduation, capitalizing on tax-saving opportunities can help make college a financial reality.
Although the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California officially backs Governor Jerry Brown's WaterFix project, its largest member agency, the San Diego County Water Authority, is highly critical, so continued backing in Southern California is not certain.
Although In Re Micron clarified waiver of venue under Rule 12(g)(2) and (h)(1)(A) in light of TC Heartland, there are still a number of issues that need to be worked out at the District Court level. And, it is likely there will be differing application across District Courts until more of these issues are worked out.
With nothing politically to lose, Governor Jerry Brown has the freedom to do whatever he wants. He is asking the state Supreme Court to, in effect, make it easier for state and local governments to reduce benefits in public employee pensions.
Mac Taylor, the Legislature's top adviser on the state budget, delivered some superficially good news this month to his bosses. With no economic downturn on the horizon, he said in his annual survey of the state's fiscal situation, there should be no problem writing a balanced 2018-19 budget next year.
Court rules that "Zootopia" and "Looney" are not substantially related and dismissed copyright lawsuit.
Bowing to pressure from critical legislators, the State Bar finally agreed to divide its two incompatible roles of licensing (and policing) attorneys and acting as a trade association for the profession.
Employers must understand the legal parameters of obtaining and using criminal history.
Most people under 40 sense a social and moral void and understand that change has to come at the communal, emotional and moral level. People over 40 need to be informed.
Distorting the language of a repeal ballot measure should not be allowed. We need to prevent it.
Upcoming tax season will be complex. Planning early with an accountant will save money and spare headaches.
If you're a retiree who is tempted to travel in the off-season, think through the costs and logistics first.
Gov. Jerry Brown was on message throughout his nearly two-week trip through Europe: Climate change is a serious threat, California is doing its part—and, especially, come to San Francisco next year for a climate conference that gets things accomplished.
Gorilla Glue #4 pot strain may need to rebrand.
California's political and legal war over whether the state's six million K-12 students are being adequately educated pits the state's education establishment against a coalition of civil rights groups, education reformers and charter school advocates over the "achievement gap" that separates poor children, particularly Latinos and African-Americans, from more privileged white and Asian students.
Those without celiac-like symptoms may want to think harder before causally adopting a gluten-free lifestyle. Doing so may damage your bank account and make your social life far more complicated, without doing your body much good.
Governor Jerry Brown is jetting around the world preaching the gospel of climate change, that everyone needs to reduce' emissions and change their lifestyles. Yet, he has a personal "carbon footprint" that's probably greater than 90 percent of Californians and 99 percent of the globe's population.
Why has there been a decline in civic institution building? Political polarization has got to be a big culprit. The affluent have also been less entrepreneurial.
If you wonder when, where, why or how to fulfill your retirement goals, you are not alone. Your dreams and financial situations are unique, and there is no one-size-fits-all retirement solution.
Waymo, the autonomous car company from Google's parent company Alphabet, has started testing a fleet of self-driving vehicles without any backup drivers on public roads.
Once employers offer vacation or PTO, their policies and procedures must comply with California wage-hour law.
The USPTO just issued a final rule for trial practice before the PTAB that explicitly protects communications between patent agents or foreign patent practitioners and their clients.
There's no particular reason why rank-and-file legislative workers couldn't be civil servants, rather that serving, as they do now, as "at-will" employees who can be fired without warning by their political masters.
The multibillion-dollar package of improvements to highways, streets and other transportation facilities enacted by the Legislature and Gov. Jerry Brown this year may do little, if anything, to relieve traffic jams.
Several common mistakes made by financially accomplished people — along with a few tips to counteract them.
It's no secret that the German economy is in great shape. Exports are through the roof. Another reason for the continuing resilience of the German economy is its highly collaborative labor unions.
California authorities are confronting the opioid crisis with public education campaigns and local community coalitions.
Shawn Lesser, a co-founder of Big Path Capital, an investment bank focused on impact investments, which seek social as well as financial returns, said interest in agriculture has surpassed that of clean energy and affordable housing.
The dramatic rise of the San Francisco Bay Area into a globally important cultural and economic powerhouse is a case study in regional cohesion. Sacramento's regional leaders say they want to emulate it. But they'll have to get their act together first.
Eric Garcetti won't be running for governor next year. He may be exploring a presidential run.
An appellate court has affirmed a trial judge's decision that a company's arbitration agreement is unconscionable and unenforceable, and that an employee cannot be compelled to arbitrate her wrongful termination and retaliation claims.
Financial considerations to keep in mind if retirement includes earning an income.
Access to medical care may be a dominant campaign issue.
Allergan case brings up questions about sovereign immunity.
Employers may be wary of their employees' social media posts, particularly when employees identify their employers in their profiles, or comment about their bosses or companies.
New gun laws enhanced California's status of having the nation's tightest restrictions on the purchase and use of firearms. However, what politicians and voters wrought last year didn't really cut down on the number of guns.
More than 140 women –California legislators, Capitol staffers, lobbyists and political consultants – signed an open letter denouncing "pervasive" sexual harassment and other forms of misconduct in state politics. "Each of us who signed this op-ed will no longer tolerate the perpetrators or enablers who do," the letter reads. Nor should we.
Some tips to guide support for disaster relief so that generosity helps rather than hinders relief efforts.
Petty efforts to dictate personal behavior can occur only because one political party so completely dominates that its members believe they have license to legislate without restraint. But in Washington, executive maturity and restraint appear to be in short supply.
Allergan's Restasis patents invalidated by a Federal District Court even after transfer to Native American tribe and sovereign immunity claim.
Democrats have three dozen Senate seats up next year, will be financially stretched to defend the most vulnerable and have been counting on big bucks from California's wealthy liberals, particularly those in entertainment and high-tech, to meet fundraising goals. Kevin de León's bold – or cheeky – challenge to Feinstein guarantees that heavy money will be raised and spent in California next year. And it could get even more expensive if billionaire Tom Steyer also jumps into the Senate race.
Larry Summers served as U.S. Treasury secretary under President Bill Clinton, and as the director of the National Economic Council in the Obama administration. He has also served as the chief economist of the World Bank and as the president of Harvard, where he now teaches. More recently, Summers has emerged as a particularly virulent critic of the Trump administration.
Consider creating a financial emergency plan for unwelcome weather events.
State and federal laws require employers to take appropriate steps to prevent and correct discrimination and harassment.
Dianne Feinstein announced on Twitter Monday morning that she'll seek another U.S. Senate term next year.
The economy is humming. Bankers are cheering. What could go wrong? Economics By Landon Thomas Jr.
Virtually every major developed and emerging economy is growing simultaneously, the first time this has happened in 10 years. Since the 2008 crisis, central banks have accumulated more than $14 trillion in assets. What happens when the central banks all start to sell?
We expect trustees' sales to be handled efficiently and, of course, legally so that all parties to a non-judicial foreclosure are satisfied that each part of the process has been handled correctly. Divergent interests of all parties to such sales can result in some pretty unsavory activities.
Since health care priorities are likely to change over time, it might be beneficial to review and make alterations to how you structure your Medicare solution.
Supreme Court ruling clarified that personal jurisdiction alone does not convey venue for patent cases under the patent venue statute. But that clarification led to confusion as to how to interpret the venue statute itself. The Federal Circuit just addressed that confusion.
Relevant research generally shows that linguistic diversity has a "negative impact" on economic growth. But whatever its inconvenience, the immense variety of human language is a beautiful thing in its own right.
Buying a property at the trustees' sale takes a bit of patience and acceptance. Sometimes the high bidder at a sale does everything right but doesn't get the chosen property even after the offer is made and accepted.
Stock market strategists and analysts are suggesting that we could see some market volatility in the months ahead.
Trade dress protection is broader in scope than trademark protection, both because it protects aspects of packaging and product design that cannot be registered for trademark protection and because evaluation of trade dress infringement claims requires the court to focus on the plaintiff's entire selling image, rather than the narrower single facet of trademark.
Overcoming the challenge of paying for higher education starts with a plan. Understanding the real costs of college tuition and fees helps you craft an effective strategy to reach your financial goal.
The Federal Circuit Court of Appeals made it very clear that during patent prosecution, the burden of proving patentability lies with the PTO examiner.
Public stock markets are fundamentally broken. Now, a series of entrepreneurs are emerging with some novel ways to fix the problem.
Stephen Dubner recently chatted with Urschel about how he managed to hold down an NFL career while secretly studying full time at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and whether the NFL will survive the CTE controversy.
Trademark dispute between multinational conglomerate and restaurant could get interesting.
there are steps you can take to help ensure your child with special needs has sufficient financial resources along with a dedicated support system.
Several bills, including one giving collective bargaining to Judicial Council workers, have won legislative approval.
Index funds and exchange-traded funds are designed to match or track a stock market index, such as the Standard & Poor's 500 Index. They can be bought very cheaply. And in recent years, a lot of people have been buying them. And this is reshaping Wall Street.
Court Denies Plaintiff's Motion to Disqualify its Former Counsel as Counsel for Defendant in a Patent Litigation Action After Plaintiff Delayed Filing its Disqualification Motion for Over A Year After Discovering the Conflict.
Lawmakers in the House took a major step Wednesday toward advancing the development of driverless cars, approving legislation that would put the vehicles onto public roads more quickly and curb states from slowing their spread.
"Rogue travelers" — those who book on their own. They are used to searching for the best fares, staying in unusual places and collecting reward points. Yet companies want to control travel costs.
Alphabet Inc.-owned Google was forced to give the federal government access to emails stored on overseas servers after a small team from the U.S. attorney's office in the Central District convinced a magistrate judge that their search warrant fell within the limits of the Stored Communications Act.
Americans need to reconnect with our ancient ideals and reconnect with the land.
Some of the most common misconceptions or myths about patents.
The defendant says he should pay no more than $300,000, the Securities and Exchange Commission says no less than $26 million.
Engaged couples should make good financial communication a priority.
There's a disconnect between California's trademark statutes and the laws governing legal cannabis use.
Some good properties can become available when a homeowner becomes unable to meet a commitment on one or more loans secured by a property.
Will high court draw bright lines for employers?
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has asked the California Supreme Court to decide whether an employee's time spent waiting for a security check constitutes "hours worked" even if the employee has clocked out.
The bad news: Roughly 70% of Americans are financially illiterate. The good news: All the important stuff about managing your money can fit on one index card.
Checklist can help organize your finances following the death of a spouse.
A few of the most common aspects of patent law that are misunderstood.
Financial conversations between siblings become inevitable, as brothers and sisters manage their parents' money matters, including estate planning, healthcare, retirement income and wills.
Silicon Valley's politics have long skewed left, with a free-markets philosophy and a dash of libertarianism. But that goes only so far, with recent episodes putting the tech industry under the microscope for how it penalizes people for expressing dissenting opinions.
A federal appellate panel grappled Tuesday with a case that could establish an unprecedented right that all children are entitled to counsel in removal proceedings before immigration courts.
California has far more electric cars and plug-in hybrids plying its roads than any other state -- about 300,000 so far. But they're still just a tiny fraction of auto sales.
What FDR didn't know is that he had appointed a former Klansman who owed his political career to the power of the invisible empire. Rumors flew, but Black lied and denied them all. It wasn't until after he was confirmed that the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette published a copy of Black's letter of resignation from the Klan. Oops.
I was at a dinner party at a friend's palatial mansion. There on the wall of the living room was Van Gogh's "Vase with Fifteen Sunflowers." I said to him, "You must have paid a fortune to the Van Gogh museum in Amsterdam." He replied with the nonchalance of the well-to-do, "It's a fake.
Residential homeowners in California feel they have been singled out by creditors who are using unscrupulous loop-holes in laws to extract unwarranted expenses especially through foreclosures on onerous and burdensome loans. Some county offices are proactively finding ways to alleviate the financial problems of many who suffer when property values plummet.
Why is the ACLU even involved in the defamation case against John Oliver, brought after his talk show "Last Week Tonight" did a segment about the coal industry.
The extension of the cap-and-trade program is a major milestone for the state's greenhouse gas reduction program. However, it leaves some important issues unanswered.
Protect your business against risks. What you need to know about business insurance.
Oftentimes, solo attorneys are faced with a difficult task of practicing law, managing a business, while continually promoting and marketing your practice.
Five plaintiffs that use medical cannabis to treat their ailments, recently filed suit to remove marijuana from its Schedule I status under the federal Controlled Substances Act.
Deciding when to collect Social Security benefits takes some thought.
Shared office space is no longer the province of just sole proprietors, startups and young professionals. Companies like WeWork have capitalized on the popularity of shared working areas, in which people and companies rent office space by the hour, day or month.
The fast-food chain is beginning a venture with the ride-sharing company this week that will allow Lyft passengers to request rides that incorporate a stop at a Taco Bell drive-thru between 9 p.m. and 2 a.m. The companies will test the option, which will appear as "Taco Mode" in the Lyft app, during the next two weeks around a Newport Beach, California, location, with plans to expand the program nationally next year.
The lender might be well advised to take less than the amount due and to permit a "cash out" of the property rather than getting entangled with the complexities of the market at this time.
All law firms should be acutely aware by now of the risks posed by hackers. There have been numerous highly publicized hacking incidents in recent years, including one recent incident where a "ransomware" attack forced a major international law firm to shut down its network — losing access to materials and, for many lawyers at that firm, the temporary inability to serve clients effectively — to try to minimize the potential harm.
Staff had suggested destroying more than 2,300 fingerprint cards the agency had never sent to law enforcement.
A growing number of federal, state, and local laws limit an employer's right to consider or even seek criminal history information from applicants and employees.
REO purchases make sense. Buyers can prepare for and avoid surprises.
Online video stars opt for Facebook over YouTube. Although YouTube pays more, stars are finding that their content spreads faster on Facebook.
Consider your options when making charitable contributions.
Despite the fact that the disparagement clause prohibits registration of a trademark that "may disparage or falsely suggest a connection with persons, living or dead, institutions, beliefs, or national symbols, or bring them into contempt, or disrepute …" rock group is allowed to trademark name because of Free Speech Clause.
Foreclosure of a property through judicial action has certain unique characteristics. Borrowers and lenders are cautious.
John Zimmer, the co-founder and president of Lyft is not happy about the chaos that is enveloping Uber. "There's nothing to celebrate in this situation, "But it does shine a light on the importance of values and ethics."
Google fine $2.7 billion for unfairly favoring some of its own search services over those of rivals. The penalty, highlights the aggressive stance that European officials have taken in regulating many of the world's largest technology companies.
With its decision Monday to not hear a case challenging California's statutes restricting concealed carrying of firearms in public, the U.S. Supreme Court continued a seven-year streak of shying away from taking new Second Amendment cases.
Proposition 13 has been around since 1978 and can't be circumvented. We need to develop ways to get additional tax income for the public services we seek.
Consider your long-term financial security and save for retirement. Saving a dollar a day could make a big difference. The most important part is getting started.
The Supreme Court held that patent owners exhaust their rights when they sell the patented product, and it is irrelevant whether the post-sale limitations imposed by the patent owner are clearly stated.
Conglomerates used to marked and defined by their largesse, while the new conglomerates are capable of hiding in plain sight due to their innovative business practices.
Social media interactions in the workplace environment can be fraught with peril, and a companies' policy should be clear and multifacted enough to address issues that arise amongst both personnell and legal challenges.
The high bidder at the trustee's sale or the foreclosing mortgagee may not have immediate occupancy rights after a property is sold at the foreclosure sale.
Can your projected future income and assets withstand the cost of long-term care if the need arises? Learn about your options and make an informed decision.
The Biologics Price Competition and Innovation Act of 2009 sets forth a carefully calibrated scheme for preparing to adjudicate, and then adjudicating, claims of patent infringement and facilitates patent litigation during the period preceding FDA approval so that the parties do not have to wait until commercial marketing to resolve their patent disputes.
It may come as a surprise to most trademark aficionados that the Eagles have never registered Hotel California with the USPTO. This begs the question: Is federal registration an absolute necessity to enforcement? The entity in control of the rock band's business affairs filed a lawsuit in the Central District. It will be interesting to see how the case of Eagles Ltd. v. Hotel California Baja plays out.
This summer is a great time to reset your financial resolutions. . Focusing on your finances today may help you to secure a more comfortable financial future for you and your family tomorrow.
Attorney General Xavier Becerra has appointed 14 members of his executive team, a group that draws heavily on the former congressman's 24 years in Washington, D.C.
A handful of mediators, forensic accountants and tax attorneys are among those being recommended to look into the Los Angeles Department of Water & Power ratepayer settlement that has been tainted with fraud allegations.
A federal judge ruled a lawsuit claiming the city of Berkeley retaliated against a group of homeless protesters by clearing their encampments and seizing their property could go to trial.
Attorneys seeking to maintain California's federal funding for family and reproductive health care services warned a judge Thursday of an "exodus" of clinics and providers that administer those services if he does not halt the Trump administration's efforts to curtail abortion programs.
Citing a 2017 U.S. Supreme Court decision, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Thursday vacated $993,758 in attorney fees in a lawsuit against the federal government over an officer who demanded bribes and sexual favors from two women from China who were seeking asylum.
The group of cases will allow the conservative majority court to resolve numerous circuit splits as well as a legal incongruence inside the federal government on how to apply discrimination protections under the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals largely affirmed Thursday a federal judge's recent decision not to grant the Trump administration an injunction blocking the enforcement of three California laws aimed at disassociating the state with the president's crackdown on illegal immigration.

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