November 12, 2020 | International Edition
The ICO and its Data Fine DilapidationsIs the decision to reduce the BA and Marriott fines an indication the regulator has gone soft on data breaches?
By Kim Roberts, King & Spalding
5 minute read
November 09, 2020 | Texas Lawyer
Social Distancing a Litigant's Rights: Court Reopening Considerations in the Age of COVID-19, Part IIAs we settle into what seems to be the new COVID-19 normal, we should continue to remain hopeful that as procedures change to accommodate a temporary threat, practices emerge that expand, rather than limit, access to the judicial system.
By Ron Zdrojeski, Samantha Darnell and Kim Daily
8 minute read
October 12, 2020 | Daily Business Review
Distinguished Leader: Jay KimKim Vaughan Lerner's managing partner advises attorneys to "stay committed to building your skills and reputation, which are the most important assets you have."
By Jay Kim
2 minute read
August 25, 2020 | The Recorder
SEC Division of Enforcement Ramps Up Coronavirus EffortsThe economic uncertainty created by COVID-19 has regulators like the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Division of Enforcement ramping up its efforts to identify and prevent fraud in the wake of COVID-19, says Hogan Lovells' Ann Kim and Jamie Hennelly.
By Ann C. Kim and Jamie Hennelly
4 minute read
July 16, 2020 | The Legal Intelligencer
An Early Look at California Consumer Privacy Act Litigation TrendsEarlier this year, California became the first state in the country to provide a private cause of action for victims of a data breach.
By Phil Yannella, Kim Phan and Greg Szewczyk
9 minute read
July 06, 2020 | Texas Lawyer
Social Distancing a Litigant's Rights: Court Reopening Considerations in the Age of COVID-19The intriguing question is not whether the problems will be solved—they undoubtedly will, as they always have—but to what extent the solutions become the new status quo.
By Samantha Darnell, Kim Daily and Ron Zdrojeski
9 minute read
June 29, 2020 | Law.com
You've Made Your Bed, Now Lie In It -- Binding Settlement Agreement Defeats A Post-Settlement JudgmentHolding that the parties' executed agreement mooted the issues in the case, the Federal Circuit recently reversed a district court's decision to grant summary judgment of non-infringement despite the parties' agreement. The decision builds upon prior Federal Circuit case law giving effect to settlement agreements.
By Rudy Kim and Chris Han
10 minute read
June 10, 2020 | Corporate Counsel
Subscription-Based Businesses Under Attack in COVID-19 PandemicBecause of the unprecedented nature of the COVID-19 pandemic and the fact there are multiple ticket or subscription models there is no one way businesses should be addressing the situation.
By Kim Matthews, Joshua Briones, Crystal Lopez and Adam B. Korn
4 minute read
May 15, 2020 | Connecticut Law Tribune
Are COVID-19 Claims Covered? It Depends on the AllegationConnecticut's high court concluded, "[a]lthough HBV is contagious, and can be transmitted through means outside the work place, for dental hygienists it is a disease so distinctly associated with their profession that the necessary causal connection is present."
By Timothy P. Law and Esther Y. Kim
7 minute read
May 12, 2020 | Insurance Coverage Law Center
Insurance Coverage for Employment Claims Arising from COVID-19These cases might help to set the precedent for handling COVID-19 workers' compensation cases in the near future.
By Timothy P. Law and Esther Y. Kim
7 minute read
Trending Stories