By Rebekah Mintzer | June 1, 2017
The 2017 State of Digital & Content Marketing Survey asked more than 100 in-house counsel to rate the credibility of various sources of information, and traditional media sources came out on top with a 95 percent credibility score.
By Rhys Dipshan | June 1, 2017
How one century-old legal department is leveraging data, deploying tools and changing corporate culture to prepare for the future of law.
By Sue Reisinger | May 31, 2017
In-house lawyers for Deutsche Bank AG and its U.S. operations have signed a consent order with regulators over its violations of the U.S. Bank Secrecy Act and anti-money laundering laws.
By David Ruiz | May 31, 2017
Dawn Smith, former top lawyer at VMware Inc., has left the company to become executive vice president, chief legal officer at computer security company McAfee LLC, according to Smith's LinkedIn profile.
By Jennifer Williams-Alvarez | May 30, 2017
With many celebrating the recent decision as a shake-up that may loosen the Eastern District of Texas' grip on patent infringement suits, in-house lawyers are faced with questions around if–and how–patent strategies should change.
By Sue Reisinger | May 30, 2017
Former PetroTiger Ltd. general counsel Gregory Weisman has been suspended from practicing before the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission more than three years after his guilty plea in a bribery case.
By Marcia Coyle | May 30, 2017
Jack Metzler, a government appellate lawyer in Washington, took to Twitter in 2013 to share his fascination with the U.S. Supreme Court and places connected to it—giving rise to the handle @SCOTUSplaces. Along the way, he picked up more than 4,200 followers and discovered a surprisingly growing and engaging appellate practitioner community. We caught up with Metzler this week about his account and the growing and engaging appellate practitioner community on social media.
By C. Ryan Barber | May 30, 2017
The National Law Journal obtained several responses from companies that received letters from the FTC this year urging greater disclosures of any paid relationships that involve so-called social media influencers.
By C. Ryan Barber | May 26, 2017
The National Law Journal obtained several responses from companies that received letters from the FTC this year urging greater disclosures of any paid relationships that involve so-called social media "influencers." The agency and consumer advocacy groups have raised concern that influencer advertising can give the impression of an organic endorsement when, in fact, there is a business relationship behind the product promotion.
By Stephanie Forshee | May 25, 2017
As of Wednesday, there is a warrant out for the arrest of Bikram Yoga founder Bikram Choudhury who has failed to pay the more than $7 million in damages owed to the global yoga business' former legal adviser.
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