Looking Beyond the Tax Incentives: Understanding Act 60

Puerto Rico’s Act 60 has generated significant interest among entrepreneurs, investors, family offices, and high-net-worth individuals because of its potential tax benefits. Much of the conversation, however, focuses on the incentives while overlooking the details that matter just as much. While Act 60 can present meaningful opportunities, understanding the requirements is just as important as […]

No Contract, No Case: The Five Documents Every Michigan Business Needs Before Something Goes Wrong

Most business disputes do not begin with fraud. They rarely start with someone intentionally trying to deceive another person. More often, disputes arise when two people believe they agreed on the same thing, only to discover later that they interpreted the conversation very differently. A relationship that once worked smoothly can change. Circumstances evolve. People […]

Law Firm Succession Planning: Why It’s More Than Just a Sale

When law firm owners begin thinking about the future of their practice, the first instinct is often to look for someone who can help them “sell the business.” That instinct is understandable, but it’s also where many lawyers go wrong. Selling a business is, by nature, a transactional exercise. A business broker or M&A attorney […]

When Public Doesn’t Mean Free: Lessons from a Recent Copyright Infringement Case

Attorneys often rely on court filings, public records, and docket materials when building arguments on behalf of their clients. Because these documents are publicly accessible, it can be easy to assume they are also freely available for reuse. A recent federal court decision serves as a reminder that public access and copyright ownership are not […]

Federal Circuit Clarifies When Patent Owners Retain Standing to Sue After Entering an Exclusive License

Introduction Before a patent owner can pursue an infringement lawsuit, it must clear a threshold that has tripped up more than a few plaintiffs: Article III standing. As the Federal Circuit explained in Morrow v. Microsoft Corp. (2007), Article III of the Constitution limits the courts to resolving actual “cases” and “controversies,” and the standing […]

The Bundle of Rights: How Copyright Ownership Really Works

Introduction On May 5, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit issued a precedential decision in Great Bowery Inc. v. Consequence Sound LLC, a copyright case that involved a district court’s summary judgment ruling against the plaintiff on the ground of lack of standing. Concluding that “the district court’s understanding of copyright law […]

More Than a Game: How the Law Shapes the World of Sports

When most people think about sports, they picture the roar of the crowd, the intensity of competition, and the thrill of victory. They think about game-winning shots, championship celebrations, and the athletes who inspire millions around the world. What often goes unseen, however, is the legal framework operating behind the scenes that helps make modern […]

Redefining the Legal Experience: Why the Future of Law Belongs to Innovative Firms

The legal industry is changing faster than most lawyers realize. For decades, the practice of law operated under a predictable structure. Traditional partnerships, billable hours, hierarchical organizations, and slow-moving systems defined what success looked like. Innovation lagged behind other industries, and firms built their operations around precedent instead of progress. That world is changing rapidly […]

When ‘Equity’ Stops Meaning Equity: The New BigLaw Partnership Model

For decades, the legal industry sold attorneys a very specific vision of success. Work hard. Bill enough hours. Build relationships. Survive the politics. Make partner. Eventually, make equity partner. That was the finish line. Ownership, prestige, autonomy, and financial upside, all wrapped into one title. But the model is changing, and quickly. A Structural Shift […]

The Patent Clock Is Ticking: What Every Inventor Needs to Know Before Going to Market

Inventors have a limited amount of time to file a patent application, after which they will be forever barred from pursuing patent protection. On April 14, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit issued its decision in Definitive Holdings v. Powerteq, which affirmed the district court’s grant of summary judgment of patent invalidity. […]