Search Results for citation:"86 FR 7559"

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Search Results: citation:"86 FR 7559"

  • Type:Notice
    Citation:86 FR 7559
    Reading Time:about 2 minutes

    The U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) decided not to review an initial determination by an administrative law judge that allowed Cree Lighting to amend its complaint in an ongoing investigation. The complaint concerns alleged patent infringement by RAB Lighting related to light-emitting diode products. As part of the amendment, Cree added one claim to their complaint and withdrew three others. The Commission believes handling all relevant claims in a single investigation is in the public interest.

    Simple Explanation

    The U.S. International Trade Commission decided not to change its mind about a judge's decision that lets a company named Cree Lighting change some of the things they were saying in a legal case about lights. They added one new part to their complaint and took away three others because it's simpler to discuss everything at once.

  • Type:Notice
    Citation:86 FR 7559
    Reading Time:about 9 minutes

    The U.S. International Trade Commission is conducting an investigation into how foreign censorship affects trade and the economy for U.S. businesses. This investigation, initiated at the request of the U.S. Senate Committee on Finance, will include a survey of U.S. businesses and focus on identifying various censorship practices in foreign markets and their impact on trade and investment. The Commission will hold a public hearing, either in person or via video conference, on September 14, 2021, and aims to submit a report to the Committee by July 5, 2022, without including any confidential business information. Written contributions from interested parties are invited, with deadlines set for submissions related to the hearing process.

    Simple Explanation

    The U.S. International Trade Commission is looking into how rules from other countries that control what people can see and hear might make it harder for American companies to do business there. They want to find out more and will share their findings with a government group next year.

  • Type:Notice
    Citation:86 FR 7559
    Reading Time:less than a minute

    The United States International Trade Commission issued a correction to a previous notice regarding deadlines for filing documents related to investigations into chassis imported from China. The original deadlines published on January 14, 2021, for posthearing briefs, closing of the record, and final comments were incorrect. The corrected deadlines are March 23, 2021, for filing posthearing briefs and statements, April 7, 2021, for the record closing, and April 9, 2021, for submitting final comments. These changes are meant to ensure proper timing for all submissions.

    Simple Explanation

    The United States International Trade Commission is letting everyone know there was a mistake about when to send in important papers about special rules for things coming from China. Now they fixed it, and they want to make sure everyone knows the new dates so they can turn in their papers on time.