New York Law Journal | Analysis
By William Schwartz, Andrew Goldstein and Daniel Grooms | March 30, 2020
Under certain circumstances, the CLOUD Act permits foreign law enforcement officials to serve production orders directly on U.S.-based providers and requires the providers to appear in court overseas if they want to challenge the orders. This possibility may soon be reality, as a novel data-sharing agreement under the Act between the United States and the United Kingdom takes effect this spring.
By H. Gregory Baker, Rachel Maimin, Kathleen McGee, Alexandra Droz | March 27, 2020
Companies who do business in the United States and have documents located abroad must understand the potential conflicts between the broad extraterritorial discovery authorized by U.S. courts, and the major restrictions on the transferring of personal data in many foreign countries.
By Alaina Lancaster | March 25, 2020
Coronavirus hasn't dismantled privacy protections in GDPR, CCPA and other privacy laws, yet.
By Monica Zent | March 24, 2020
Here are a few important legal considerations to keep in mind as you transition your teams to remote work.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By David J. Rosenbaum and Kevin Ricci | March 20, 2020
A discussion on how to protect legal information stored in cloud solutions. Inquiries address the most pressing concerns related to cloud storage and provide guidance for both current and future solutions used by law firms and businesses in general.
By Stephen Johnson, Cozen O'Connor | March 17, 2020
In a time where augmented and artificial intelligences are becoming a reality, we need to maximize the potential of the data we are collecting. Geospatial data visualization is an untapped resource for most law firms.
The American Lawyer | Analysis
By Dylan Jackson | March 12, 2020
Brick-and-mortar firms weren't built with remote work in mind, say the leaders of distributed firms, so they face obstacles both physical and cultural as more attorneys log in from home to limit the spread of COVID-19.
By Victoria Hudgins | March 12, 2020
Georgetown Law launched a new master of law (LL.M.) program for lawyers and a master's degree for nonlawyers to equip them with the knowledge to better navigate the new regulatory landscape of emerging technology.
By Nathan Cemenska, Wolters Kluwer's ELM Solutions | March 10, 2020
While common sense is valuable, an armchair philosopher's viewpoint of how things ought to be can't compete against evidence-based suggestions.
By Alaina Lancaster | March 4, 2020
A Reddit user who criticized the policies of Jehovah's Witnesses will remain anonymous, according to a judge's ruling.
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