By Mike Scarcella | July 21, 2020
"Each day that the government is allowed to escalate its takeover undermines that trust—trust that may never fully be regained," Deepak Gupta argued for the Open Technology Fund in the D.C. Circuit.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Stephen M. Kramarsky | July 20, 2020
In this technology column on Intellectual Property, Stephen M. Kramarsky discusses how the Second Circuit has clarified discovery limits in international arbitration.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Shari Claire Lewis | June 15, 2020
Although BIPA is an Illinois statute, it is widely depended on as a predicate for class actions concerning assertions of privacy rights filed in New York and elsewhere, Shari Claire Lewis discusses in her column.
By Rebecca Brazzano | June 10, 2020
A highlight of some risks employers may face from their employees using Zoom, sexting on a company-issued device or using the device to share intimate photos.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Katherine B. Forrest | June 4, 2020
In her column on Artificial Intelligence, Katherine Forrest discusses our updated expectations of privacy in this era of Zoom, WebEx, computer cameras, and the Domestic Awareness System (DAS), which gives the NYC Police Department the capability to follow, watch and listen to millions of New Yorkers.
By Jason Grant | May 6, 2020
For sure, 2019 saw a lot of new suits. But on a year-over-year basis, it was "flat," said two Seyfarth Shaw partners who track the number of federal suits filed nationally. By contrast, from 2017 to 2018 there was "an explosive 177% increase" in the number of suits, from 814 to 2,258.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Peter Brown | April 13, 2020
While various scams have been victimizing Internet users since the dawn of the Internet, the disruption caused by COVID-19 makes lawyers working from home, perhaps for the first time, more vulnerable. In his Privacy Matters column, Peter Brown, identifies some of the most common ploys and how to avoid making your law firm a victim.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Stephen M. Kramarsky | March 23, 2020
Stephen M. Kramarsky addresses anonymous defamatory posts, writing that fortunately, at least in New York, there is a procedural rule, CPLR §3102, that can be used to provide early judicial intervention to pierce the veil of anonymity where a court deems it necessary and appropriate. He discusses a recent example.
By Jane Wester | March 12, 2020
Rehabilitating people includes helping them reconnect, Biklen said, arguing that the law inhibits that process.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Lewis R. Clayton and Eric Alan Stone | January 14, 2020
The Supreme Court is set to decide 'USPTO v. Booking.com', on the issue of whether a generic top-level domain combined with an otherwise-generic second-level domain can create a non-generic, protectable trademark for an online business. In their Intellectual Property Litigation column, Lewis Clayton and Eric Alan Stone report on this pending appeal.
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