Get Permission, OK?

Dua Lipa sued Samsung for using a photograph of her on boxes of TVs sold by Samsung. She accused Samsung of copyright and trademark infringement and of violating her “right of publicity”. The photograph is one of Dua Lipa, but more importantly for the copyright claim, she owns the copyright to the photo. Without her permission to use … Read more

Legal Gets Lighter When It Becomes Infrastructure

At some point in every organization, legal feedback arrives at the wrong moment. The team is close to launch, a deal is almost across the line, and then counsel comes back with redlines, qualifiers, replacement language, and things that cannot be said the way they were written.  It lands as interruption. The work was moving, … Read more

Minnesota Hemp Roundup

For the past year, Minnesota’s lower-potency hemp edible (LPHE) market has operated in a state of regulatory grace. As of April 1, 2026, that period has officially ended. The Minnesota Office of Cannabis Management (OCM) has fully assumed the reins, and the rules of the game have shifted from “registration” to “strict licensure.” If you are … Read more

Not All Secrets Are Created Equal: Trade Secrets vs Confidential Business Information

Introduction Not all business information is created equal, especially when it comes to legal protection. Companies often use the terms “trade secrets” and “confidential information” interchangeably, but under Wisconsin law, the distinction is meaningful and can significantly impact both risk exposure as well as available remedies. Understanding how these categories of information differ is essential … Read more

Infringers Infringe – Not Internet Service Providers

Under the Copyright Act, anyone who violates any of the exclusive rights of the copyright owner is an infringer of the copyright. On top of that, the Supreme Court has also recognized two categories of secondary liability. Secondary liability happens when a party is liable for the copyright infringement of another. Those two categories are “contributory” … Read more

When the State Buys AI, Who Decides the Limits?

Most of the public conversation about AI still focuses on the technology itself. Is it safe? Is it biased? Which company is building the most powerful model? Those questions matter. But when the government uses AI to help make decisions that shape people’s lives, a different question comes into view. This strikes me as more … Read more

Setting Yourself Up to Own What You Think You Own

There is a common assumption in the business world: If you paid for it, you own it. As laid out in one of Erin’s earlier posts, that is not always a case with IP. To quickly summarize, the default under copyright law is that whoever creates the thing owns the copyright, even if someone else paid to have it created. The exception to this is a “work made for … Read more

AI Made It. Now Who Owns It?

Artificial intelligence (AI) is rapidly becoming a part of the tools we use every day. AI can be found on our computers, our phones, our cars, and beyond. As AI systems grow more advanced, it becomes increasingly appealing to rely on them to generate content, ideas, and even finished works with little to no human … Read more

DE Franchise Tax: Keep an Eye on Registered Agent Mail Following Your Initial Filing

The Delaware Franchise Tax and Annual Report deadline was March 1st! If you didn’t know that, your report is late! For a lot of clients with Delaware corporations, franchise tax season seems straightforward: file the annual report, pay the tax, and move on. But, the Delaware Secretary of State does sometimes follow up requesting more … Read more