By Angela Morris | February 10, 2020
Whether it's fighting against one person's face being realistically pasted on another's body in a porn video, or against the mass collection for facial recognition database used by law enforcement, lawyers have thoughts about causes of action that could come into play.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Dave Poston and Ioana Good | February 6, 2020
News of companies facing crises is plentiful and without a response plan, the impact could be catastrophic.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Alejandro Miyar | February 6, 2020
Innovation has become one of the buzziest priorities in law practice. As our world and clients evolve, there are increasing demands on our industry to lead.
By Alaina Lancaster | January 27, 2020
A probation department's warrantless searches of a high school boy's electronic devices are "appropriately tailored" given that he used his cellphone for extortion and to store child pornography, ruled California's Sixth District Court of Appeal.
By Samantha Joseph | January 27, 2020
A key question before the justices: Had the defendant ranked vendors based on the amount of consulting services they'd purchased?
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Bari Weinberger | January 15, 2020
Civil remedies related to bad behavior on social media, including proving damages in related marital tort claims, continue to tread in uncertain waters. But when a vindictive spouse's problematic actions on social media rise to the level of criminal behavior, New Jersey has some of the strictest laws on the books.
By Frank Ready | January 14, 2020
California launched its new IoT security law earlier this month, but manufacturers may still have a lot of questions about what they need to do in order to comply—that is, if they are even aware of the law at all.
By Raychel Lean | January 14, 2020
The putative class action lawsuit accused American Airlines Inc. of using website cookies and algorithms to systematically trick customers into accepting contracts at lower prices before hiking them up at the last minute.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Lewis R. Clayton and Eric Alan Stone | January 14, 2020
The Supreme Court is set to decide 'USPTO v. Booking.com', on the issue of whether a generic top-level domain combined with an otherwise-generic second-level domain can create a non-generic, protectable trademark for an online business. In their Intellectual Property Litigation column, Lewis Clayton and Eric Alan Stone report on this pending appeal.
By Raychel Lean | January 13, 2020
This putative class action lawsuit accused American Airlines Inc. of using website cookies and algorithms to systematically trick customers into accepting contracts at lower prices before hiking them up at the last minute, but the court found the claims didn't hold up to scrutiny.
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