Nonequity Partners Are Burning Out — And AI Might Be the Final Straw
Nonequity partners are miserable. A new survey shows only 28% satisfied, a third undervalued, over half burnt out — and legal AI tools aren't helping.
For twenty years, I've seen Silicon Valley chase shiny objects. Now, a legal expert is calling out patent policy for doing the same, clinging to outdated narratives while real innovation goes misunderstood.
Nonequity partners are miserable. A new survey shows only 28% satisfied, a third undervalued, over half burnt out — and legal AI tools aren't helping.
Twenty souls pack a Cornell Law classroom as Amy Wax unleashes on 'woke' universities. Federalist Society's latest stunt? Pure provocation.
One partner logs 19.3 hours in 24. A $35 million bill lands in court. WilmerHale's elite machine hits a wall.
Solicitor General Sauer pitches allegiance as the key. Trump bolts. Justices swarm with history bombs.
Yale Law School just lost its crown. A one-spot drop to No. 2 — tiny on paper, seismic in prestige — exposes cracks in how we measure legal might amid cyber threats and campus revolts.
Supreme Court originalism freezes the Constitution in 1789 amber. Edward Foley says look at what we mean by its words today—instead. Is this the update American law desperately needs?
Dreaming of IP academia but stuck in Big Law? GW's Frank H. Marks Fellowship might be your hidden accelerator. Low pay, high prestige—here's why it punches above its weight.
A $47 million jury hit on Texas ISP Grande Communications? SCOTUS just wiped it clean — for now. Remanded under Cox v. Sony's strict intent test, this could shield neutral pipes from labels' piracy policing demands.
Imagine Big Pharma's factories sprouting across Ohio rust belts overnight. Trump's bold EO demands it — or face crippling tariffs on patented drugs. But at what cost to your wallet?
While the Supreme Court wrestles with AI regs and privacy battles, their pets offer a reminder: these are regular folks with slobbery dogs and rogue goats. But does it change how they rule?
Picture this: Pharma suits staring down generics reps in a USPTO room thick with tension. Patents aren't the villain—abusive PTAB tactics are.
Two years in, GDPR fines top €114 million — yet Google shrugs off €50 million slaps. 2020's report and rulings could reshape data rules, but enforcement lags threaten the dream.