By Richard Raysman and Peter Brown | January 14, 2009
A number of long-term outsourcing deals that were signed at the turn of the millennium are showing the strain of age, technological advances and changed circumstances. Renegotiati
By Amanda Bronstad | April 2, 2009
Federal prosecutors in the criminal stock options backdating case involving Broadcom Corp. have appealed a recent decision finding that certain statements made by William Ruehle, the former chief f
The Associated Press
By Michael J. Martinez | July 24, 2006
John Mack, chief executive of Morgan Stanley, will be interviewed by the Securities and Exchange Commission in an investigation of a hedge fund he participated in prior to taking over the Wall Stre
By Alyson M. Palmer | September 25, 2006
Senior Judge Peter T. Fay didn't say much during the first case up for oral argument at the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Sept. 15. But when the jurist did speak, he might have expre
By Pamela A. MacLean | April 13, 2009
Growing shareholder unrest over corporate limits on voting rights to change bylaws or oust board members took a new turn with a suit by a Michigan pension fund against Axcelis Technologies Inc. for
By Lou Whiteman | July 13, 2006
For general counsel Jonathan B. Wilson, arbitration started to lose its gloss when the much-vaunted method of resolving cases quickly and cheaply landed his company in a costly, protracted court ba
The Associated Press
By Brian Bergstein | September 21, 2006
Hewlett-Packard Co. may be the world's largest technology company, but the superlative that better suits it these days is Provider of the World's Strangest Corporate Drama. For two weeks, a
Special To Law.Com
By Harry A. Valetk | August 4, 2009
Marketers, stand down. In the wake of an increasingly socially networked, behaviorally advertised existence, Maine has quietly enacted a new law to put an end to predatory marketing practices again
Special To Law.Com
By Jonathan W. Hughes and Simon J. Frankel | November 22, 2005
Return to EDD Trends of 2
By Thomas B. Scheffey | May 29, 2007
In 2000, when the dot-com bubble burst, one of the highest-flying Internet companies to crash was Stamford, Conn.-based Priceline.com, known for bargain airline, hotel and car rental rates, and its
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