By Angela Morris | January 2, 2020
Courts nationwide have been grappling with legal questions about reader comments, but one attorney says this Texas case is the first one he's seen regarding comments from others.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Zack Needles | January 2, 2020
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has agreed to take up a case that poses a potential conundrum: How do you determine the proper venue for a defamation claim over information that was published only on the internet?
By Angela Morris | December 31, 2019
The finding troubles First Amendment attorney Tom Leatherbury of Dallas, who noted that courts nationwide have been grappling with legal questions about reader comments, but this case is the first one he's seen in this context.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Michael Hersh and Kimberly Wald | December 31, 2019
Now we're discussing the effects of "smart" technology and social media. While it has always influenced our profession, technological progress is having a greater impact now than ever before.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Leonard Deutchman | December 26, 2019
On Oct. 29, Facebook and WhatsApp filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California against NSO Group Technologies, Inc. (NSO) and its majority shareholder, Q Cyber Technologies, both Israeli companies.
By Mike Scarcella | December 23, 2019
DOJ's Office of Legal Counsel "simply renders legal advice and has no power to determine the 'rights or obligations' of, or impose 'legal consequences' on, plaintiffs or anyone else," the Justice Department asserted in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Rob Drover | December 23, 2019
Will digital workers be considered in-scope for unionization? This may not be as far-fetched as you might think. Could a business replace or supplement unionized jobs with digital workers and maintain compliance with the union contracts?
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Shari Claire Lewis | December 16, 2019
Over the past month or so, the FTC took a number of notable privacy-related actions against a host of companies regarding what it considered to be their problematic online activities. Many states have passed or carried over a patchwork of privacy legislation for consideration in their next legislative session, including 25 pieces of privacy legislation that are pending in New York state alone. In her Internet Issues/Social Media column, Shari Claire Lewis discusses these recent developments.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | December 15, 2019
We agree with the rationale in Jardim, but do not feel complacent that sales of items posted on the internet may not in other factual settings create jurisdiction here.
By Leigh Jones | Vanessa Blum | December 13, 2019
Time waits for no one. So in this episode we're exploring the changes in legal tech that developed this year and what we can expect in 2020.
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