By Ana Tagvoryan, Jennifer J. Daniels, Ana Amodaj & David J. Oberly, Blank Rome | March 7, 2019
California's new privacy regulation possesses the potential to cause a seismic shift in the landscape of data privacy law not just in California, but across the country.
By ALM Staff | March 6, 2019
We caught up with USC law professor Orin Kerr to talk about the pressures that digital technology places on the Fourth Amendment and where things go next.
By David Kalat, BRG | March 5, 2019
This isn't the first time the debate over technological advancements versus fundamental privacy rights has reached Congress. In this month's look at the history of cybersecurity, David Kalat looks back to the National Data Bank of the 1960's.
By Kristen Rasmussen | March 5, 2019
Collaborations between popular consumer genetic testing companies like 23andMe and pharmaceutical giants like GlaxoSmithKline to develop new drugs raise data privacy concerns for in-house lawyers, who must navigate this murky compliance landscape largely through privacy policies.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Mark A. Berman | March 4, 2019
In his State E-Discovery column, Mark Berman discusses how courts have become more sophisticated in how they address social media discovery demands, including “critically examining the breadth of the demand in order to permit disclosure of information that is material and necessary to the issues in dispute.”
Legaltech News | Analysis|News
By Frank Ready | March 4, 2019
Firms are helping clients prepare for the enactment of the California Consumer Protection on January 1, 2020. But it's difficult to hit the ground running with some vagaries surrounding the law still in place.
By Edna Conway | March 1, 2019
The profound changes deriving from IT/OT convergence require us to take a fresh look at legal and regulatory norms that have stood for decades since the Industrial Era. We are in a radical new environment where exponential benefits and risks are now reality.
By Paul Ferrillo | March 1, 2019
In recent years, plaintiff class actions lawyers have shifted their focus in cybersecurity cases from pleading federal claims to asserting claims under state law of residents of all 50 states. However, this potentially raises class certification issues that make these claims difficult for plaintiff to succeed on. How should one prosecute them? How should one defend them? How could one plead and prove that the plaintiffs were injured because of the breach?
By Una A. Dean and Melis S. Kiziltay Carter | March 1, 2019
The draft Guidelines seek to clarify questions raised since the passage of the GDPR over the GDPR's extra-territorial reach, and they confirm that the GDPR's intended reach is well beyond the geographic confines of the European Union.
The American Lawyer | Analysis|News
By Frank Ready | March 1, 2019
Firms are helping clients prepare for the California Consumer Privacy Act, but with some vagaries still surrounding the law it will be difficult to hit the ground running.
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