By Frank Ready | October 30, 2018
The Library of Congress and the U.S. Copyright Office added exemptions to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act that will allow consumers and outside repair technicians to hack the embedded personal devices for maintenance or repair purposes. Still, getting around the code might not be so easy.
By Frank Ready | October 29, 2018
The European Parliament's non-legislative resolution exploring the regulation of blockchain technologies underscored how trust will likely play a key factor in any future oversight.
By Bryony Hurst and Jonathan Robb, Bird & Bird | October 29, 2018
Lloyd v. Google was an attempt to recover compensation from Google on behalf of millions of unidentified, and uninvolved, individuals, and the internet giant's victory has confirmed that hurdles remain to bringing such litigation in the U.K.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Jeff Sassinsky | October 25, 2018
The buzz around drones has swept the World. Their use in infrastructure inspection, cinematography and search and rescue are obvious, but can this technology be used in litigation to save money and ultimately win more cases?
By Frank Ready | October 25, 2018
Despite privacy laws like the GDPR and the California Consumer Privacy Act of 2018, ending a commercial relationship doesn't mean that your data is no longer in play.
By Jeff Ton, InterVision | October 25, 2018
It can be tough to dedicate a large portion of budget and resources to building an IT disaster recovery (IT-DR) plan, but these practices could easily lead to catastrophe.
By Victoria Hudgins | October 24, 2018
Venture capital counsel who spoke to Legaltech News said business-consumer legal technology services seem to be catching on with users and investors are following, but time would tell if high-dollar amount investments would become common.
By Frank Ready | October 24, 2018
Apple has a new privacy portal for users to access their data, but the company's business model means other tech companies may not be following its lead.
By Philip Favro, Driven | October 24, 2018
A recent opinion from U.S. Magistrate Judge Katharine Parker in Winfield v. City of New York rebuffs some of the recent misguided attempts to dilute FRE Rule 502(d)'s provisions.
By Nathan Cemenska, Wolters Kluwer's ELM Solutions | October 23, 2018
Corporate legal teams need to focus on establishing goals and measuring outputs, not inputs, if they are to successfully align their operations with their companies' overall business objectives.
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