By Amanda Bronstad | March 14, 2018
Laura Simmons, senior adviser at Cornerstone and co-author of the report, said the cases last year were just smaller.
By R. Robin McDonald | March 14, 2018
The SEC accused the former executive of capitalizing on confidential company information to cash in his stock options in advance of Equifax's public announcement of a massive data breach.
By Erin Mulvaney | March 14, 2018
"Morgan Lewis apologizes to the court for allowing this issue to arise," partner Jason Mills told U.S. District Judge William Alsup, presiding over a wage-and-hour class action.
By Zach Warren | March 14, 2018
From Microsoft at the Supreme Court to Uber in Pennsylvania, privacy and security lawsuits are all the rage for court watchers.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | March 14, 2018
A federal judge in Connecticut ruled Monday for five plaintiffs, who sued alleging an artificial inflation of prescription drug costs. The case, which was not dismissed, will now go into discovery phase.
By Erin Mulvaney | March 13, 2018
Newly unsealed court papers in a gender discrimination case against Microsoft open a window into how one company has confronted workplace allegations of disparate treatment.
By Amanda Bronstad | March 12, 2018
Yahoo Inc. will face punitive damages over data breaches that affected more than 3 billion email user accounts after a federal judge refused to dismiss most of the claims.
By Marcia Coyle | March 12, 2018
Google Inc. tells the U.S. Supreme Court there was nothing unfair or unreasonable about the tech company's $8.5 million settlement of a privacy class action in which $5.3 million of the funds go to third parties and none to members of the class. Class members—more than 100 million Google users—each would have received 4 cents, court records show. The Google settlement directs settlement funds to be distributed proportionally to six recipients that are devoted to web privacy.
By Caroline Spiezio | March 9, 2018
Companies like Uber and Airbnb have faced questions over their ability to provide services accessible to those with disabilities. But these companies have also presented answers.
By Ross Todd | March 9, 2018
U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers on Thursday found that Uber's agreement with drivers didn't allow the company to deduct its $1 "Safe Rides" fee from the total used to calculate what drivers received from short, low-fare rides.
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