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Top Mobile Use Cases in Law Firms
"Bring your own device" programs, popularly known as BYOD, are taking the legal profession by storm. I've seen it firsthand at a number of legal technology conferences and gatherings, and the Am Law Tech Survey 2012, coming to the December 1 issue of Legal affiliate Law Technology News, finds legal professionals everywhere as either providing or supporting their mobile device use.Standard Chartered looking at up to $700 million to resolve allegations
New York's Department of Financial Services is investigating the London-based bank for conduct involving disguised Iranian money transfers.Activist Wants Lawyers Prosecuted For Crimes Divulged in Ethics Cases
A public-interest activist wants to make sure that disciplined lawyers whose ethics cases reveal criminal conduct are prosecuted for it.Court Readies for Biggest Copyright Fight Since the VCR
The most important copyright challenge in decades will unfold in the U.S. Supreme Court next week with potentially enormous damages and the future of Internet innovation at stake. Twenty-one years ago, the high court held that the maker, distributor and sellers of the Betamax videocassette recorder were not liable if users infringed copyrights. The justices next week face a similar question, but the file sharing technology in MGM Studios v. Grokster is light years ahead of the videotape recorder.Client Needs Drive Texas Firms' Out-of-State Expansion
Roughly 27 percent of Houston-based Bracewell & Giuliani's 418 lawyers are in out-of-state offices, and managing partner Mark Evans expects that percentage to grow over the next five years -- "Easily at least 35 percent," says Evans. His confidence about Bracewell's growth outside Texas reflects the enthusiasm expressed by managing partners of other big Texas firms about why they're happy to increase the size of their national and international footprints with a network of new offices.View more book results for the query "*"
Judge Hands Google Win on Copyright Question
U.S. District Judge William Alsup holds that the 37 APIs that Oracle -- and a jury -- said Google infringed can't be protected under copyright law.Drunken Drivers May Sue Dram Shops That Served Them Prior to Accidents
A New Jersey appeals court ruled Wednesday that liquor establishments are not protected by a state law that bars drunken drivers involved in accidents from suing other parties for economic and noneconomic damages.D.C. Law Firms Are Learning to Love Austerity
Even those that are growing are streamlining operations to please recession-wary clients.KB Dissolution Corp. v. Great American Opportunities Inc.
Complaint's Amendment to Resurrect Claims Is Found Not FutileTrending Stories
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