
Top Stories
Monkeypox Shots Under the Skin Offer Hope for Stretching Supply
A proposal to stretch the US monkeypox vaccine supply by injecting smaller doses more superficially has promise because of the technology used to make the shot, infectious disease specialists say.
Inventors Must Be Human, Federal Circuit Rules in Blow to AI
Computer scientist Stephen Thaler was dealt another blow in his battle for artificial intelligence machines to be recognized as inventors on patents, after the nation’s top patent court found that inventors must be humans.
Italian Billionaire Had Share Edge Over Reality TV Star Wife
Italian billionaire Silvio Scaglia told the whole world his fashion businesses were half-owned by his wife, reality TV star Julia Haart, but he secretly kept at least a one-share advantage at all times, a Delaware judge said, explaining her recent ruling resolving a bitter dispute between the divorcing couple.
Crypto Risks Prompt Uptick in Insurance Exclusions
As the crypto market crashes, some insurance companies are stepping up efforts to exclude coverage for crypto-related risks under a range of insurance policies.
In ‘Unique’ Case, Gibson Blocks Guitar Sales Despite Suit Delay
Waiting 40 years to enforce its guitar-shape trademarks didn’t bar Gibson Brands Inc. from halting Dean Guitars’ sales of Flying V-shaped guitars going forward.
State ‘Personhood’ Laws Threaten Embryonic Stem Cell Research
Biomedical scientists using embryonic stem cells or fetal tissue could find their studies at risk in conservative states aiming to redefine personhood after the US Supreme Court’s rollback of abortion rights.
Steven Davis and the Rise and Fall of Dewey & LeBoeuf
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