New York Law Journal | Analysis
By H. Christopher Boehning and Daniel J. Toal | June 1, 2020
A district court recently found some actions taken while under a duty to preserve indicative of intentional spoliation, including the company and CEO's use of ephemeral messaging, the failure to disable auto-deletion of emails, and the reformatting and other spoliation of devices allegedly used to transfer trade secret information. In their Federal E-Discovery column, H. Christopher Boehning and Daniel J. Toal discuss how the clearly frustrated court issued case terminating sanctions for this "staggering" discovery misconduct.
By Victoria Hudgins | June 1, 2020
Having to transition from LIBOR, which will potentially require numerous contract revisions and negotiations, can be significantly more complicated than meeting other regulatory demands, such as the GDPR or CCPA.
By Rhys Dipshan | June 1, 2020
To turn their staff into tech users, firms and corporate law are learning how to become more inclusive and better communicators.
By Frank Ready | May 29, 2020
ALSPs may offer corporations and legal departments a more comprehensive set of services for their investment, but legal tech providers are already finding willing customers for their products in those very same law companies.
By Victoria Hudgins | May 29, 2020
As law school summer associate programs, internships and externships go remote, law schools say their students faces hurdles in their learning experience.
By Varsha Patel | May 29, 2020
Unprecedented company pressures combined with remote working is taking its toll on several general counsel.
By Victoria Hudgins | May 28, 2020
Remote working and economic uncertainty caused legal tech vendors to adjust their sales tactics to a more personal, consultative approach. But some wonder if it's enough to compensate for a lack of face-to-face interactions.
By Frank Ready | May 27, 2020
While contract negotiation tools may have seen a bump in consumer interest during the pandemic, could those gains be challenged as employees slowly return to offices and are able to resume face-to-face negotiations?
By Victoria Hudgins | May 27, 2020
E-discovery lawyers caution that, while the discovery process is similar across any litigation, bankruptcy proceedings require quicker turnarounds and more challenging data handling procedures.
By Jennigay Coetzer | May 27, 2020
The COVID-19 crisis has created an urgency around the need for long-absent cyber laws across the continent.
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