Legaltech News | Analysis|Research
By Xiumei Dong | June 26, 2019
Kruze Consulting surveyed its startup clients about the smaller law firms they turn to.
By Nicole Clark, Trellis | June 25, 2019
During its initial drafting, many of public reviewers of the Electronic Discovery Act expressed concerns that the proposed legislation would overburden the courts and litigants with motions for protective orders. In practice, the results are mixed.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Evan T. Barr | June 24, 2019
Should fingerprints and facial recognition be treated more like passcodes and passwords in the smartphone context? Two recent cases reflect a split of authority on that question.
By Frank Ready | June 24, 2019
In a bid to design better legal tech platforms, teams of software engineers, data scientists and product managers from LexisNexis recently took part in moot court competition in North Carolina to understand how lawyers work and think.
By Victoria Hudgins | June 24, 2019
The FTC's alleged investigation of YouTube's data processing of young viewers is part of a growing effort internationally to safeguard what and how children's data is being collected and used, said an attorney.
By Frank Ready | June 21, 2019
A new report from the law firm of Pinsent Masons shows that there has been a high level of GDPR "over-reporting" at the U.K.'s Information Commissioner's Office, but organizations who may think they are playing it safe may actually be opening themselves up to further regulatory scrutiny.
By Frank Ready | June 19, 2019
A new survey indicates that organizations are wielding tech in an effort to bolster productivity as more legal work is kept in-house. But don't expect companies to drastically increase their technology spend over the next year.
By Philip Favro, Driven | June 17, 2019
While several recent cases exemplify the Hobson's Choice seemingly facing many companies, the Corel Software, v. Microsoft and Brooks Sports v. Anta decisions are particularly instructive on these issues.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Kayvan Sadeghi | June 14, 2019
The New York Office of Attorney General is battling one of the largest global cryptocurrency exchanges and one of the most prominent “stablecoin” issuers in a proceeding that may test the limits of the OAG's expansive authority to prosecute securities and commodities fraud under the Martin Act.
By Frank Ready | June 14, 2019
Governments law enforcement agencies may never stop collecting personal information, but should there be a limit to how long they can keep it?
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