By Angela Morris | September 1, 2020
One lawyer appeared through Zoom and the rest were in-person in a high school auditorium. After troubleshooting audio problems, it worked.
By Victoria Hudgins | September 1, 2020
Ethical obligations won't stand in the way of lawyers looking to leverage Reddit for business development. But lawyers might struggle to get over the platform's "bad rap" and a possible threat to attorney-client privilege.
The American Lawyer | Analysis
By Patrick Smith | August 31, 2020
Changing workflows, client wants and of course the pandemic have all exacerbated an existing trend of longer ramp up times for new attorneys.
By Angela Morris | August 28, 2020
Data shows that civil appellate filings fell by 18% between February and June in Texas' 14 courts of appeal. Lawyers and judges say a lack of final judgments, which can be appealed, is to blame.
By Frank Ready | August 27, 2020
Fearing a sudden need or legal hold obligations, attorneys are often reluctant to delete data that is doing nothing but taking up space. However, failure to create an endpoint for data can increase cybersecurity risks and run counter to the budget mandates that most legal departments are facing.
By Victoria Hudgins | August 25, 2020
All eyes were on Utah when it allowed nonlawyers to perform more legal services and share fees with lawyers for the first time in the U.S. Now states will closely watch how Utah lawyers' revenue and consumer complaints fare in the new "sandbox."
By Victoria Hudgins | August 24, 2020
Upset stenographers say tech provider Stenograph's new logo is a misleading image of the profession, amid concerns that tech companies are trying to push humans out of the industry.
The American Lawyer | Analysis
By Samantha Stokes | August 24, 2020
For better or worse, few issues capture associates' attention like work-life balance. In this year's Midlevel Associates Survey, they opened up about the pressures they feel.
By Victoria Hudgins | August 20, 2020
While a law firm's alternative legal service provider (ALSP) may be more expensive, corporate legal departments says there's more than just the vendor's Big Law backing that is appealing.
By Angela Morris | August 20, 2020
Among almost 2,800 lawyers surveyed in June, 57% said they would not be open to a virtual jury trial. So it's no surprise that a San Antonio court couldn't find lawyers to volunteer for its first Zoom civil jury trial on Wednesday.
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