New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Bari Z. Weinberger | November 27, 2023
Digital evidence is a firmly ensconced feature in divorce, making it crucial for attorneys to educate clients on personal cybersecurity and the legal and ethical obligations involved with gathering and disclosing digital and online information. What is fair game and what constitutes an invasion of privacy rights?
By Jack Womack | November 27, 2023
One person said the removal could mean the firm has paid a ransom to the hacking group, which is of the most notorious in the world and is viewed as having strong links to Russia.
By Jack Womack | November 23, 2023
A&O faces having confidential data published on the dark web following an attack by ransomware group LockBit—a cyber security expert explains how the firm's merger with Shearman could well have caught the hackers' attention.
By Cassandre Coyer | November 21, 2023
Legaltech News looked back at some of the significant cybersecurity incidents from this fall, from "lax" practices to evolving strategies from bad actors.
By Melissa 'Rogo' Rogozinski and Steve Salkin | November 21, 2023
Part Two of a Two-Part Article A report on the September panel discussion sponsored by the Miami Dade Bar Association Law and Technology Committee, on AI and how to effectively use it in law firms.
By ALM Staff | November 20, 2023
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Kai Pfiester | November 17, 2023
Cybersecurity is a journey, not a destination. We cannot purchase a product or service that magically solves all our problems involving information security. Certainly, we can mitigate risk. But we can never eliminate it.
By Kate Brumback / The Associated Press | November 13, 2023
U.S. District Judge Amy Totenberg issued a 135-page ruling late Friday in a long-running lawsuit filed by activists who want the state to ditch its electronic voting machines in favor of hand-marked paper ballots. The state had asked the judge to rule in its favor based on the arguments and facts in the case without going to trial, but Totenberg found there are "material facts in dispute" that must be decided at trial.
The Legal Intelligencer | Analysis|News
By Amanda O'Brien | November 10, 2023
While a majority of general training is conducted virtually, in-person mock trial activities are a common thread between the training regimens at Duane Morris, Fox Rothschild, and Blank Rome.
By Greg Andrews | November 9, 2023
"The 'e' in email also stands for 'evidence' and 'eternal,'" said Amy Manning, a partner at McGuire, Woods, Battle & Boothe.
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