By Elizabeth Lampert | February 21, 2023
The first 48 hours of the crisis and how you handle it will make a difference in the event's evolution, according to PR strategist Elizabeth Lampert.
By Julia Y. Trankiem and Veronica A. Torrejón | February 21, 2023
California employers need to start telling their workers (and potential workers) when and why they collect their personal information, according to Julia Trankiem and Veronica Torrejón of Hunton Andrews Kurth.
By Shari Klevens and Alanna Clair | February 17, 2023
Denton's Shari Klevens and Alanna Clair share some tips to help tackle the questions of whether to advise others of personal emergencies and how to do so.
By John Scheerer | February 14, 2023
Attorneys or their clients might mistakenly, but reasonably, believe that the privilege automatically continues on in perpetuity, but in the probate world, privileges are often eviscerated as a matter of statutory law after death.
By Evan Louis Miller | February 13, 2023
A bold offer from artificial intelligence start-up DoNotPay of $1 million to any attorney who would allow the company's "robot lawyer" to argue before the U.S. Supreme Court has initiated a wave of skepticism and intrigue across the legal community.
By Anna Pletcher, Kelse Moen, Emme Tyler and Molly Shuminer | February 6, 2023
Because competitor collaboration creates the risk of antitrust liability, industries may have to thread the needle between advancing social values and avoiding criminal or civil antitrust liability.
By Ronald Zambrano | February 6, 2023
In the three decades since the term "going postal" entered the lexicon, workplace mass shootings have outpaced school shootings, but little attention has been focused on what employers can do in advance.
By Jeremy Veit and Austin Pollet | February 1, 2023
While these challenges are likely to continue in 2023, prolonging sluggish deal markets, most market-watchers expect deal volume to pick up in the second half of this year, according to Jeremy Veit and Austin Pollet of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison.
By Brian Kabateck and Annie Martin-McDonough | January 31, 2023
Advocates argue that reinstating the tort of seduction will open new avenues for victims of sexual exploitation to sue their perpetrators in California, according to Brian Kabateck and Annie Martin-McDonough of Kabateck.
By Benny Osorio | January 31, 2023
A Coinbase case has serious implications for companies that have not been successful in enforcing arbitration agreements in federal district court, according to retired Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Benny Osorio.
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