The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Joshua A. Mooney and Linda D. Perkins | October 30, 2020
On Oct. 1, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) and the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) in the U.S. Department of the Treasury collectively issued a pair of advisories warning ransomware victims, their insurers, and their incident response teams of potential sanctions for facilitating a ransomware payment.
By Mark Sangster, eSentire | October 30, 2020
Large legal firms are at particular risk for ransomware and cultural engineering. How can legal firms minimize their susceptibility to cultural engineering attacks without inconveniencing staff to the point that they seek out security workarounds?
By Yvonne Nath, ALSPadvisor.com | October 29, 2020
Will ALSPs be able to maintain competitive pricing, culture, and strategy as they grow through expensive lateral hiring sprees? We have seen how this can play out in law firms, though ALSPs can be more highly leveraged with outside investment and they can eventually go public... but will investors see a positive ROI? Will clients?
By Nathan Cemenska, Wolters Kluwer ELM Solutions | October 28, 2020
A good percentage of your invoice is going to be wasted if your billing guidelines are difficult to comprehend, routed to the wrong person, and/or not enforced. Unfortunately, that is more common than most folks in the industry may realize.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Joanna L. Storey | October 27, 2020
During remote conferences, always assume you have a hot microphone, even though you appear muted on the screen. If you have a connected monitor and you close the laptop, your microphone may still be on.
By Philip Favro, Driven | October 27, 2020
Estate of Moreno v. Correctional Healthcare Companies shows that disposition initiatives that lack safeguards to ensure relevant information is preserved for litigation could leave an organization vulnerable to disaster.
By Aron Solomon | October 26, 2020
Far too often, discussions of ethics in legal marketing are, well, legal. They focus exclusively on what a lawyer is legally allowed to get away with…
By Jason Brennan, Luminance | October 26, 2020
If law firms fail to adequately respond to new imperatives, they not only risk losing an important opportunity to grow and scale but perhaps they even threaten their ability to survive at all in the quickly evolving legal landscape.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Tracey E. Diamond | October 23, 2020
As businesses begin to reopen, some employees are reluctant to return to the office, whether from a general fear about catching COVID-19 or due to a health condition that makes catching COVID-19 all the more deadly.
By Michel Sahyoun, QuisLex | October 22, 2020
Historically, ransomware attacks were focused on the payoff, not acquiring information. That changed in late 2019.
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