December 13, 2011
Attorneys and stakeholders reviewing oral arguments in the Mayo case predict broad Section 101 to continue, but are cautiously optimistic that the Supreme Court will provide more guidance on preemption, as well as separate novelty and nonobviousness analyses. Finnegan partner Denise DeFranco takes the middle ground between those who saw a change in the Court's view and those who saw a continued overemphasis on issues outside Section 101. She said that she was “worried so many of the justices seemed interested in putting Section 102 and 103 concerns into 101…but [was] optimistic that the Court will continue to see these types of claims as patent eligible.”
Commentary
May 20, 2026
Award/Ranking
Finnegan Partner Antje Brambrink Shortlisted for Women in Business Law EMEA Award
May 13, 2026
Press Release
Finnegan Secures Decisive ITC Victory for Innoscience in Final Determination
May 11, 2026
Award/Ranking
Associates Rank Finnegan “Best of the Best” in BTI Associate Satisfaction Survey
May 7, 2026
Announcement
Finnegan Partner Ningling Wang Becomes President of Licensing Executives Society International
May 4, 2026
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