By Ross Todd | November 14, 2018
"As a lawyer, this evolution challenges me to continue learning and finding new ways to apply the law in uncharted territory," Blanco says.
By Michael Bahar, Frank Nolan and Trevor Satnick, Eversheds Sutherland | November 14, 2018
Companies impacted by California's SB-327—especially manufacturers and distributors of IoT devices—should work to ensure compliance with the act as soon as possible if regulatory fallout is to be avoided come January 2020.
Legaltech News | Best Practices|Analysis
By Frank Ready | November 12, 2018
Law enforcement has successfully used social media to go undercover and monitor potential bad actors. Facebook's policies prohibit such behavior, but the courts don't seem to mind.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Samuel D. Levy and Martin S. Krezalek | November 9, 2018
Business usually prefers to avoid championing day-to-day government regulation. But a recent explosion of “surf by” lawsuits accusing consumer-facing websites of violating Title III of the Americans With Disabilities Act has businesses demanding regulations setting the minimum requirements to render commercial websites accessible to disabled visitors.
By Ross Todd | November 8, 2018
Mark your calendars, cyber-enthusiasts: Judge William Alsup is asking attorneys in a suit against Facebook over the massive data breach it disclosed in September for a rundown on "the subject of data privacy and the technology used to both protect and attack it."
Litigation Daily | Quick Takes
By Ross Todd | November 8, 2018
Mark your calendars, cyber-enthusiasts: Judge William Alsup is asking attorneys in a suit against Facebook over the massive data breach it disclosed in September for a rundown on "the subject of data privacy and the technology used to both protect and attack it."
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Jeffrey N. Rosenthal and Thomas F. Brier Jr. | November 2, 2018
In 1999, renowned inventor and self-described futurist Ray Kurzweil—now director of engineering at Google—published "The Age of Spiritual Machines," in which he proposed a formula for calculating the rate of change in evolutionary systems.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Leonard Deutchman | November 1, 2018
In Fox v. Smith, No. 1438, February term 2018 (C.P. Philadelphia, Aug. 30), Judge Arnold L. New held that, under current caselaw, a cause of action for defamation, false light and conspiracy could have proper venue in Philadelphia County because: the plaintiff, a Democrat, was running for mayor in Chester Heights, Delaware County, in the November 2017 election.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Anthony S. Volpe and Savannah G. Merceus | October 30, 2018
Prior to 2018, the last significant piece of copyright legislation addressing digital developments in music was the 1995 Digital Performance Right in Recordings Act (DPRA).
By Scott Graham | October 30, 2018
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit rejected a big tech industry push to overrule a venue ruling that subjects Google to patent infringement suits in the Eastern District of Texas. A dissenting judge warned of "far-reaching consequences" for internet businesses.
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