From AI to blockchain to digital surveillance, Meghann Cuniff reports on developments at the intersection of law and technology, peering around the corner at the courtroom clashes and policy choices that promise to revolutionize business, life and the practice of law.
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By Meghann M. Cuniff | March 2, 2022
By Meghann M. Cuniff | February 23, 2022
By Meghann M. Cuniff | February 9, 2022
By Meghann M. Cuniff | November 24, 2021
➤➤ PACER fees have long been a source of complaint, but a JAMS neutral working as a special master in the proposed class action over Facebook's Cambridge…
By Meghann M. Cuniff | October 13, 2021
A federal jury in the Northern District of California returned a record-setting $137 million verdict against Tesla in a racial discrimination lawsuit. And a man was sentenced to 30 years in federal prison in a sex crimes case that exemplifies how crime evolves with technology.
By Meghann M. Cuniff | October 6, 2021
Lawyers in a proposed securities class action against video game maker Activision Blizzard have proposed a lead plaintiff who they say lost nearly $12,000 during the five-year proposed class period..
By Meghann Cuniff | September 29, 2021
Attorney Whitney Bernstein of Bienert Katzman Littrell Williams in San Clemente, California, shares insight into a recent mistrial in a federal criminal trial in Arizona against founders of Backpage.com, who are accused of using the website to facilitate prostitution.
By Meghann M. Cuniff | September 22, 2021
Tim Shields, an attorney with Kelley Kronenberg in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, spoke to What's Next about the current state of the flourishing criminal industry of cyberattacks, and how lawyers such as him are helping clients navigate safety precautions and practices.
By Meghann M. Cuniff | August 4, 2021
Twitter again becomes an issue in Michael Avenatti's federal wire fraud trial in California, with Avenatti complaining about a witness reading trial tweets before her testimony.
By Charles Toutant | August 2, 2021
The appeals court said case law has "not historically treated a parent's usage of marijuana, whether illegal or not, as a categorical basis for stripping that defendant of his or her parental rights," but rather calls for examining "the case-specific impacts the drug usage has or has not had on the child's care and safety."
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