The University of Sydney has emerged triumphant in its long running battle over the intellectual property rights of a glaucoma testing device, with the Federal Court ruling against opthalmic diagnostic tool manufacturer ObjectiVision.
Liquidator of Ambient Advertising unit sues director after funding go-ahead from court
Court signs off on AMP’s new remediation program in ASIC insurance churn case
Fair Work Ombudsman ‘very concerned’ about Subway’s non-compliance
Channel 7 loses defamation case over ‘manifestly unreasonable’ welfare cheat story
Wyeth loses privilege claim over Allens docs in Merck’s vaccine patent case
BASF presses the brakes on Lubrizol fuel additive patent suit
‘Isn’t that what you’re here for?’: ‘Underbelly’ actor accused of sexual harassment on set of TV series
Solidarity forever: Trade unions make the class action regime strong
Against a backdrop of an industrial relations system which has diminished union and workers’ power, class actions are again re-emerging as an alternative tool to challenge employers’ unlawful conduct. And in the current class actions landscape, the ability to run closed class proceedings on behalf of union members, or otherwise offer alternative fee arrangements to non-members in open class proceedings, is essential to trade unions’ willingness to embrace the representative proceeding regime, writes Slater & Gordon lawyer Alex Blennerhassett.