Music and concert lovers are at an all time high with many artists lined up to perform in the Philippines this 2024. Are you looking for a way to maximize this once in a lifetime experience? Whether it is capturing high quality videos, taking selfies with your friends, sharing and saving your live reactions and…
In February, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office announced a deal to expand its artificial intelligence capabilities, the U.S. Navy gave a shipbuilder $1.2 billion to begin its overdue overhaul of the USS Boise, and the U.S. Defense Health Agency expanded its contractor pool for a $2.5 billion information technology deal, after being accused of unfairly evaluating bidders' proposals. These are Law360's top government contracts for February.
The U.S. Court of International Trade has refused to pause the collection of national security tariffs on a Texas company's imports as the company petitions the U.S. Supreme Court to review the duties, saying it's skeptical of arguments that mid-litigation tariff assessment would be irreversible.
The U.S. International Trade Commission vindicated baby stroller and playard importers embroiled in a two-year intellectual property battle with Graco Children's Products and a Taiwanese manufacturer, saying the imported products didn't infringe their rivals' patents, according to a Tuesday announcement.
The U.S. Court of International Trade ordered the U.S. Department of Commerce to take a third pass at countervailing duties on Russian phosphate fertilizer, finding issues with how officials calculated the value of the companies' phosphate mining rights.