By Charles Toutant | April 26, 2024
"This isn't a case where we ask 'why does Mr. Kratovil want to report this particular fact?' It's a case where we say 'does the government have the right to tell journalists which facts they get to report and which facts they don't, when the facts are true, related to issues of public concern and lawfully obtained?'" said ACLU-NJ attorney Alexander Shalom.
By Cassandre Coyer | April 26, 2024
An update on the legal tech market's past few weeks, from product launches to new partnerships.
By Isha Marathe | April 25, 2024
Nebraska became the fourth state this year, and the sixteenth overall to pass a data privacy statute. Besides one key difference, the law follows familiar language.
By Riley Brennan | April 23, 2024
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar, ALM's source for immediate alerting on just-filed cases in state and federal courts. Law.com Radar now offers state court coverage nationwide.
By Patrick Smith | Cedra Mayfield | April 19, 2024
Zeem Solutions GC and Chief Privacy Officer John Meyer discusses the importance of data privacy and how difficult it has become to protect as the number of external vendors many companies, and law firms, utilize grows exponentially.
By Cassandre Coyer | April 18, 2024
The complaint alleges that LexisNexis wielded its "trove of PII" to advertise its Lexis Personal Records Products without the subjects' authorization. This case was first surfaced by Law.com Radar.
By Colleen Murphy | April 18, 2024
"Although I wish the dissent's reasoning had prevailed, what seems clear is that when CPANJ's records are in the hands of a prosecutor or other public agency, they can likely still be obtained that way," CJ Griffin, director of the Justice Gary S. Stein Public Interest Center at Pashman Stein Walder Hayden, said in a statement emailed to the Law Journal. "It will just take much more time and effort to track down which of the 21 prosecutor offices holds a particular document."
By Maydeen Merino | April 17, 2024
In the absence of a federal statute, many states have implemented their own data privacy laws, prompting Rep. Debbie Lesko, R-Arizona, to cite concerns that a federal law would need strong preemption language.
By Isha Marathe | April 17, 2024
In first-of-its kind legislation, the updated Colorado Privacy Act (CPA) will consider consumer neural data as "sensitive information." California and Minnesota are likely to follow suit.
By Amy de La Lama and Andrea Rastelli | April 17, 2024
Like so many other features of the MHMDA, data subject rights are deceptively complicated and have the potential to create significant administrative hurdles to getting it right. In this article, we examine the tricky issues in our MHMDA FAQs and take a deep dive into data subject rights.
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