New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Mark A. Berman | December 29, 2023
President Biden recently issued an executive order entitled "The Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy Development and Use of Artificial Intelligence" seeking to promote "safe, secure and trustworthy development and use of artificial intelligence." AI has been imbedded as part of businesses' operations for years, but only recently has it reached world-wide mainstream advocacy in both its most positive and negative forms.
By Colleen Murphy | December 28, 2023
"If I were to predict what the U.S. Supreme Court would do, I think it is just hard for plaintiffs to win when you have to win on every element," University of Notre Dame Law School professor Derek T. Muller said. "Trump only needs to win on one."
By Charles Toutant | December 28, 2023
Carl Tobias, a professor at the University of Richmond School of Law who studies federal judicial nominations, called the act of sending back the name "part of the culture wars, part of the basic politicization and partisanship that goes on" and a "stick in Biden's eye that wastes resources and time."
By Brian Lee | December 28, 2023
The lawsuit is by the towns of Babylon of Suffolk County, and Brookhaven, Hempstead, Huntington, Islip, North Hempstead, Oyster Bay, Ramapo and Smithtown of Nassau County, which in total are populated by more than 3 million people.
Daily Business Review | News|Profile
By Michael A. Mora | December 28, 2023
"You've created a conundrum that the Florida Bar will have to figure out how to solve," said the outgoing Miami-Dade administrative and complex litigation circuit judge.
By Allison Dunn | December 27, 2023
"For too long, aspiring lawyers with disabilities could not get needed accommodations unless they could afford expensive testing to further document their disabilities," Jessica P. Weber, a partner at Brown Goldstein & Levy, told Law.com.
National Law Journal | Analysis|News
By Abigail Adcox | December 27, 2023
While law firms in D.C. may have been more cautious with hiring, sustained demand for regulatory and enforcement practices have also had a positive effect on firms' profits.
By Michael A. Mora | December 27, 2023
Two trends were on display in judicial disciplinary misconduct in 2023.
By Brian Lee | December 27, 2023
The attorneys general filed an amicus brief that stood in support of government agencies and officials that are subject to the injunction.
By Colleen Murphy | December 26, 2023
"Mere policy disagreement, however, is insufficient to support the state's environmental claims against federal defendants," according to a memorandum filed by the U.S. Department of Justice, which stated that New Jersey's claims fail under a differential standard of review. "And rather than support its claims by otherwise engaging with the robust record at issue, the state instead relies on superficial arguments or selective interpretation of the record."
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