By Ed Silverstein | January 8, 2019
The New York Civil Liberties Union challenges the planned use in Lockport, New York, while school officials say they recognize the importance of safeguarding privacy.
By David Horrigan, Relativity | January 7, 2019
The Internet of Things (IoT) is moving onto and inside the human body, becoming the Internet of Bodies (IoB). So what does that mean for the future of the law and privacy risks?
Legaltech News | Analysis|News
By Frank Ready | January 7, 2019
Law firms can help small or new businesses focus their limited cybersecurity budgets where they can do the most good. Privacy and compliance have emerged as key areas for those dollars.
By Phillip Bantz | January 7, 2019
Subsentio GC Joel Margolis describes his company as a 'bridge between government, industry and the privacy interests of the subscriber' of a telecommunications carrier.
By Phillip Bantz | January 4, 2019
Subsentio's general counsel and vice president of government affairs, Joel Margolis, describes his company as a "bridge between government, industry and the privacy interests of the subscriber" of a telecommunications carrier.
By Frank Ready | January 4, 2019
IT consulting firm Exigent Technologies has spun-off Partners in Regulatory Compliance (PIRC), a regulatory compliance and cybersecurity specialty business that will try to make its way in a marketplace that's becoming increasingly crowded.
By Cheryl Miller | January 3, 2019
Here's our quick roundup of things we're watching in the new year—happy New Year! Plus, we've got a new ruling from a California federal judge in a RICO case, and firms are ever more concerned about data privacy and cannabis. Thanks for reading Higher Law!
By Meghan Tribe | January 2, 2019
The new office, focused on a cybersecurity and data practice, is the latest of several launched by Am Law firms in the past year.
By Charles M. Hosch and Kathryne 'Kate' M. Morris | January 1, 2019
Until recently, most outsourcing processes have paid little attention to the privacy of individuals' personal information.
By Christine P. Leatherberry | January 1, 2019
Appellate judges who have ruled on cases involving online impersonation have called upon prosecutors to apply common sense in place of faulty language.
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