By Amanda Bronstad | Amanda O'Brien | July 22, 2024
Law firms are investigating potential lawsuits to come out of CloudStrike's global tech outage, but there may be limits on who can recover damages.
By Cheryl Miller | July 22, 2024
Court leaders said the ransomware attack does not appear to be related to the worldwide outages caused Friday by a CrowdStrike software update problem.
By Amanda O'Brien | Samson Amore | July 19, 2024
"I'm hearing of more West Coast latencies than on the East Coast," said one Am Law 100 executive. "It really depends where [the office] is regionally, whether they're experiencing the same symptoms even within the same firm."
By Amanda Bronstad | July 19, 2024
"Can you point to a single case in the history of litigation where a judge awarded class counsel a multiplier on work performed by other lawyers?" U.S. District Judge Vince Chhabria asked attorney John Yanchunis.
By Kat Black | July 19, 2024
The panel followed a hearing by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit on the laws at issue, California's Age-Appropriate Design Code and California Assembly Bill 587, which cover online transparency.
By Maria Dinzeo | July 18, 2024
But Judge Paul Engelmayer's ruling did not challenge the SEC's decision to include Chief Information Security Officer Tim Brown as a defendant—a decision that has rattled the cybersecurity industry.
By Jordan Rae Kelly and David Dunn, FTI Consulting | July 18, 2024
GCs should coordinate closely with chief information security officers, boards, and business leaders to play a key role in challenging cybersecurity strategy, understanding cybersecurity capability, and supporting tactical uplifts to protect the strategic interests of the organization.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Emily Cousins | July 10, 2024
"The fallout from this data breach has and will continue to wreak havoc on the healthcare industry," one complaint said.
By Rhys Dipshan | July 10, 2024
The cybersecurity startup, which offers a cyber crisis management and readiness platform, was founded by a former partner and head of tech regulation at Israeli law firm Herzog, Fox & Ne'eman.
By Emily Cousins | July 8, 2024
ALPHV Blackcat, the "notorious" cybercrime group, is likely behind the attack, the complaint contended. The group is known for ransomware and data extortion. The personal data will also likely be sold on the dark web, the plaintiffs alleged.
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