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There are four basic issues, and the recording industry has to win on each of them in order to prevail. This annoys him, but it is also part of his strength: it makes him seem more down-to-earth and straightforward. Several weeks later, Boies found himself in the San Francisco courtroom of US District Judge Marilyn Hall Patel, defending Napster against the attempt by the Recording Industry Association of America to shut down the service with a preliminary injunction. What is he taking?” his driver at Cravath wondered. And if the limits should be changed, as the RIAA seems to be saying, should that be done by a court or by Congress?Do you think Napster will be bought by one of the record companies?I doubt it. “You put him on the stand and there is a possibility that he could mesmerize people.”) Second, it cut the ground out from under his underlings: if Gates, the archetypal hands-on boss, couldn’t explain away some incriminating document, they surely could not. Cable television came along and copyright owners said, "Oh, this is terrible. Whenever Boies promised to show more footage, courtroom seats suddenly became scarce. Nor did Cravath pay much attention when, with Boies on the case, the Yankees sued Major League Baseball in May 1997 for interfering with the 10-year, $95 million sponsorship agreement the team had negotiated with Adidas. We know there needs to be a fair return to do that, but we don't want an excessive return, because the ultimate beneficiary is designed to be the consumer.Remember, it wasn't so long ago that there was no copyright protection for musical recordings. One friend recalled watching Boies and another customer nearly come to blows at Abercrombie & Fitch as they attempted to spin the same giant globe in opposite directions. Vincent promptly called Time Warner C.E.O. By the time we go to trial, the 9th Circuit will take up this appeal issue. There’s his ability to assimilate arcane new disciplines: just as he had to reconstruct the Vietnam War to take on General William Westmoreland in his 1984 libel case against CBS, and learn about junk bonds to face disgraced investment banker Michael Milken, he was barely computer-literate when the Microsoft case threw him into the brave new world of browsers, platforms, and run times. They're copying our works." Sometimes he was self-deprecating. At the urging of one of Boies’s teachers, Harold Shapiro, an adjunct professor at Northwestern University Law School, came out to interview him. After hours and on days off, he talked to other clients, picked juries, argued appeals, and took depositions, including that of Hollywood manager Brad Grey, whom comic Garry Shandling had sued. He stuck with Steinbrenner. Perhaps the Microsoft lawyers didn’t trust Boies. So when Napster's users engage in noncommercial sharing of music - noncommercial copying of music - is that activity copyright infringement?We say it is not, for two basic reasons. And the Supreme Court said, "No, we're not going to stop it. Boies is renowned for being able to absorb several conversations simultaneously; while giving a visitor what appeared to be his undivided attention, he placed colleagues on the speakerphone, then seemingly ignored them. “He obviously considered the attorney not to be as bright as he is,” Ebert told By December 1998, at which point the case was in mid-trial, Gates was accusing Boies via satellite of being “out to destroy Microsoft” and of “badgering” him with irrelevant or trick questions.
There are four basic issues, and the recording industry has to win on each of them in order to prevail. This annoys him, but it is also part of his strength: it makes him seem more down-to-earth and straightforward. Several weeks later, Boies found himself in the San Francisco courtroom of US District Judge Marilyn Hall Patel, defending Napster against the attempt by the Recording Industry Association of America to shut down the service with a preliminary injunction. What is he taking?” his driver at Cravath wondered. And if the limits should be changed, as the RIAA seems to be saying, should that be done by a court or by Congress?Do you think Napster will be bought by one of the record companies?I doubt it. “You put him on the stand and there is a possibility that he could mesmerize people.”) Second, it cut the ground out from under his underlings: if Gates, the archetypal hands-on boss, couldn’t explain away some incriminating document, they surely could not. Cable television came along and copyright owners said, "Oh, this is terrible. Whenever Boies promised to show more footage, courtroom seats suddenly became scarce. Nor did Cravath pay much attention when, with Boies on the case, the Yankees sued Major League Baseball in May 1997 for interfering with the 10-year, $95 million sponsorship agreement the team had negotiated with Adidas. We know there needs to be a fair return to do that, but we don't want an excessive return, because the ultimate beneficiary is designed to be the consumer.Remember, it wasn't so long ago that there was no copyright protection for musical recordings. One friend recalled watching Boies and another customer nearly come to blows at Abercrombie & Fitch as they attempted to spin the same giant globe in opposite directions. Vincent promptly called Time Warner C.E.O. By the time we go to trial, the 9th Circuit will take up this appeal issue. There’s his ability to assimilate arcane new disciplines: just as he had to reconstruct the Vietnam War to take on General William Westmoreland in his 1984 libel case against CBS, and learn about junk bonds to face disgraced investment banker Michael Milken, he was barely computer-literate when the Microsoft case threw him into the brave new world of browsers, platforms, and run times. They're copying our works." Sometimes he was self-deprecating. At the urging of one of Boies’s teachers, Harold Shapiro, an adjunct professor at Northwestern University Law School, came out to interview him. After hours and on days off, he talked to other clients, picked juries, argued appeals, and took depositions, including that of Hollywood manager Brad Grey, whom comic Garry Shandling had sued. He stuck with Steinbrenner. Perhaps the Microsoft lawyers didn’t trust Boies. So when Napster's users engage in noncommercial sharing of music - noncommercial copying of music - is that activity copyright infringement?We say it is not, for two basic reasons. And the Supreme Court said, "No, we're not going to stop it. Boies is renowned for being able to absorb several conversations simultaneously; while giving a visitor what appeared to be his undivided attention, he placed colleagues on the speakerphone, then seemingly ignored them. “He obviously considered the attorney not to be as bright as he is,” Ebert told By December 1998, at which point the case was in mid-trial, Gates was accusing Boies via satellite of being “out to destroy Microsoft” and of “badgering” him with irrelevant or trick questions.