The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Ajay Raju | March 8, 2018
Stephen Goodman, who died last week at the age of 77, was one of those rare lawyers. The sobriquet “visionary” is probably overused in remembrances of longstanding influential figures, but it is nearly an understatement when applied to Goodman, the unrivaled conceptual architect of Philadelphia's startup and tech sectors.
By Julie Brush | March 8, 2018
The offer stage is often likened to a chess match: Watching. Waiting. Thinking. And strategically assessing your “opponent's” moves … as well as your own. It can be a maddening period for both candidate and employer.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Douglas E. Roberts | March 7, 2018
Part of your practice—whether it focuses on civil or criminal litigation, internal investigations or even business transactions—will involve interviewing witnesses who will inform your matters. Here are a few tips, gleaned from my experience in speaking and listening to witnesses in offices, roadside diners and detention facilities, for conducting effective interviews.
By Erin Mulvaney | March 6, 2018
"Part of my job is to get these issues in front of people, for them to think and talk about them," Cameron Fox, a Paul Hastings labor and employment partner in Los Angeles, says. We catch up with Fox on a host of workplace issues facing tech companies and others.
By Katheryn Tucker | March 6, 2018
U.S. District Senior Judge Jack B. Weinstein of the Eastern District of New York issued the opinion granting standing to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to exercise its enforcement power over virtual currency fraud.
By Roy Strom | March 6, 2018
A company called LawGeex commissioned a study matching up human lawyers against artificial intelligence to read and review non-disclosure agreements. The robots won.
By Ben Seal | March 2, 2018
At 36, James Goodnow is taking the reins of Fennemore Craig, with an eye toward technology and innovation.
By Roy Strom | March 1, 2018
Conventional wisdom says AI will take the grunt work off lawyers' plates, freeing their time for higher level thinking and legal analysis. But is there enough higher-level work for to go around?
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Jonathan D. Klein | March 1, 2018
So often articles related to cybersecurity focus solely on assessment and preparedness against external forces (e.g., cybercriminals, hackers, ransomware, etc.), yet do not convey the full array of protections necessary to ensure complete cyberpreparedness for a busin
By Marcia Coyle | March 1, 2018
"I am not into cryptocurrency—I generally try to avoid things that start with crypto," Paul Clement says. The Texas State Securities Board, in a cease-and-desist order, said a crypto company was promoting—wrongly—that RBG and a group of former U.S. solicitors were advising the outfit.
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