By Hugo Guzman | November 2, 2021
New technologies and social networks always will be fertile ground for specialty areas of legal expertise. And with Meta promising a virtual reality revolution, lawyers in the tech space should start preparing to navigate the new technology.
National Law Journal | Analysis
By Christine Schiffner | October 28, 2021
Class actions alleging price-fixing are heading to the courts at the same time as the Biden administration focuses its attention on antitrust in the agricultural industry.
By Andrew Goudsward | October 27, 2021
Attorney General Merrick Garland sat in the hot seat in a congressional oversight hearing for the second time in as many weeks.
By Greg Andrews | October 27, 2021
"Now what Facebook has done—it actually is pretty amazing—is unify the conservatives and liberals over their hatred for Facebook," said Jay Edelson, Edelson CEO.
Daily Report Online | Letter to the Editor
By Bret Williams | October 27, 2021
This week the Atlanta Braves are playing the Houston Astros in the World Series, baseball's crown jewel.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Phil Goldberg and Tom Stebbins | October 14, 2021
Simply put, categorically eliminating state antitrust actions from ever being consolidated in MDLs does not facilitate justice; it facilitates excessive and burdensome litigation at the expense of justice.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Karen Hoffman Lent and Kenneth Schwartz | October 12, 2021
On Sept. 30 and Oct. 1, 2021, the 48th Annual Conference took place in New York, and focused on major themes including international and inter-agency cooperation and accounting for public interests in antitrust enforcement.
By ALM Staff | October 11, 2021
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.
By Andrew Maloney | October 8, 2021
Law firms took dramatic steps at the start of the pandemic to reduce costs for themselves and for their clients. But while many reversed their own furloughs and draw reductions, a new report outlines how write-offs, discounts and alternative fees remain "widespread," even as client demands have increased over the last year and a half.
By Carl W. Hittinger and Marc G. Schildkraut | October 8, 2021
Historically, new presidents often appoint officials that make modest policy changes to antitrust enforcement. President Joe Biden's July 9 executive order on promoting competition in the American economy suggested that the changes coming to antitrust enforcement are far more than modest.
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