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YouTube Murder Mystery Hoaxer Loses Free Speech Case
The Georgia Supreme Court has upheld a North Georgia man's false statements conviction based on his creation of an online murder mystery game using YouTube. The novel prosecution resulted in suspended prison sentences for defendant Andrew Scott Haley if he completed a work release program. But the missing persons cases Haley's game touched on were serious, indeed.Growth Biz for IP Lawyers: Policing the Net
The rise of the Internet as a commercial medium has been a curse and a boon to content owners. Online business sales are booming, but so is Internet piracy. As a result, Internet policing has become a major cost of doing business for many companies.Staking a Claim in a Virtual World
Virtual worlds mean more than slipping into the persona of an avatar. The business lawyer who ignores the potential impact of virtual reality on global commerce is like the lawyer who, 15 years ago, ignored the Internet's potential to transform business and life as we know it.The Data Boom: Can Law Firms Profit?
The boom in electronic discovery presents an opportunity and a predicament. Writer Alan Cohen reports that law firms are taking different approaches to e-discovery -- though no one has the magic formula. E-discovery is here to stay, and firms can ramp their practices or wave goodbye to key clients.View more book results for the query "*"
Attorney-Client Privilege in Work E-Mails
Can employees retain attorney-client privilege for e-mails sent to their lawyers using employer-provided e-mail and computers? Attorney Anthony E. Davis seeks to reconcile apparently inconsistent decisions, and to aid in advising clients on avoiding the risks such communications pose.International Committee Could Standardize E-Discovery Processes
Members of the International Standards Organization — a 66-year-old body with 162 member nations, tackling everything from bank transactions to shoe sizes — are forming a new committee to develop standards for e-discovery processes that, if passed, would define procedures for technology companies, discovery providers, and their clients to follow when handling digital data.IBM Tips the Scale Toward Software
IBM has agreed to buy Cognos, a provider of open-standard-based business intelligence and performance management software to more than 23,000 customers, for $5 billion. The acquisition is the latest move by IBM to rely more on software and less on its famous hardware products.Trending Stories
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