New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Scott M. Smedresman and Morgan Jones | January 22, 2021
The California Privacy Rights Act (CPRA) will largely take effect on Jan. 1, 2023, adding a handful of rights for California consumers and new obligations for businesses, which will be enforceable by the California Privacy Protection Agency, a new state privacy regulatory agency created by the CPRA.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Jeffrey N. Rosenthal and David J. Oberly | January 21, 2021
Known as the New York Biometric Privacy Act, the bill—if enacted—would impose significant compliance burdens on companies handling biometric data. More importantly, the bill, which provides for a private right of action, would likely bring with it a tsunami of class action litigation akin to that seen with BIPA since 2019.
By Jeff Cox, UniCourt | January 19, 2021
Building an in-house analytics discipline is no longer just a "nice-to-have" for law firms looking to retain and expand their position in the legal market.
By Dan Clark | January 12, 2021
Dan Jaffe, group executive vice president of the Association of National Advertisers in Washington, D.C., discusses the push for national privacy laws, and the obstacles faced by the effort.
By Victoria Hudgins | January 12, 2021
COVID screening apps and software may play a significant role in giving attendees access to certain venues. And if one company's plan is any indication, they'll likely steer clear of privacy lawsuits.
By Peter Brown | January 11, 2021
In response to increasing regulatory constraints, some of the Internet's largest companies have created large aggregations of user data into "Walled Gardens" and data "Clean Rooms" where advertisers can test and target their messaging without violating the privacy of the data subjects. In his Technology Law column, Peter Brown explains how these large pools of data further the goals of the advertising industry without violating the increasingly strict national privacy regimes.
By Katherine B. Forrest | December 28, 2020
In the areas in which high-tech issues and the law intersect, there is much to do.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Katherine B. Forrest | December 28, 2020
In the areas in which high-tech issues and the law intersect, there is much to do.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Robert Storace | December 23, 2020
More than two dozen attorneys general announced Wednesday they'd reached a $2.4M settlement agreement with Texas-based Sabre Corp., which had been hacked potentially affecting 1.3 million credit cards.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Shari Claire Lewis | December 14, 2020
In her Internet Issues/Social Media column, Shari Claire Lewis writes: The breadth of recent cyber incidences reflects more than just the problems of securing work-from-home technology, interference with Zoom conference calls, and system vulnerabilities that existed even before COVID-19. Indeed, they essentially are a 2021 blueprint for the kinds of privacy issues that companies may best be advised to focus on, and that legislators and regulators in New York and elsewhere across the country may seek to address.
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