By Lindsay Zhu, Scott Warren, Haowen Xu and Charmian Aw | May 15, 2024
Nearly six months after the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) was first introduced for public consultation, the much-awaited final rules on Regulating and Facilitating Cross-border Data Flows were published and came into effect. The New Regulations largely repeat the Draft Regulations, but now have further relaxed personal data exports from China.
By Saurabh Mehra, Oddr | May 15, 2024
What's interesting here is not so much the errors that have taken place in the past, but how little technology has come along to solve the problem for law firms and their clients, to significantly improve that critical aspect of client service that happens during the delivery of the clients' invoice—until now.
By Jack Womack | May 15, 2024
In February, Farhad Azima accepted Dechert's offer to settle the portion of their dispute playing out in London, which includes £3 million in damages and likely many million more in costs.
By ALM Staff | May 10, 2024
This ruling was selected and summarized by the New York Law Journal's decision editors.
By Cassandre Coyer | May 8, 2024
The 2024 AI Expo for National Competitiveness in Washington, D.C., saw many stakeholders debating how to effectively build trust and safety into AI-enabled consumer products and services.
By Justin Henry | May 8, 2024
Scott Lashway, who had founded Manatt's Boston office in 2019, now serves as co-chair of Mintz's data privacy and cybersecurity practice.
By Allison Dunn | May 7, 2024
Some of the personal information came from litigation documents in the Kansas appellate courts, applications to the Kansas bar, or other records held by the office, court administrators announced in a news release.
By David Kalat, BRG | May 7, 2024
Hacking may seem like a current phenomenon, but in the 1830s, a pair of brothers managed to carry on a scheme of hijacking the French national telecommunications network for two years before being caught.
By Maria Dinzeo | May 6, 2024
Most of the 13 companies disclosing "material" breaches reported the incidents quickly but with few details. "Some [filings] are quite skinny in terms of facts, and you can see the SEC disagreeing with their compliance because they are relatively thin," Debevoise & Plimpton partner Ben Pedersen said.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Mark A. Berman, Jessica L. Copeland and Victoria M. Okraszewski | May 6, 2024
This article focuses on the requirements of CISA's proposed cyber incident reporting rule, the compliance requirements for covered entities and the steps entities can take to protect themselves.
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