By Elisa Reiter and Daniel Pollack | January 19, 2024
For loquacious lawyers jaded by years of practice, particularly those who have had the discipline to specialize, how can we revamp, refocus and learn to listen more?
By Rory K. Little | January 18, 2024
"But rejecting the clear language of the 14th Amendment to say that it bars Trump from running for the office, is to fall prey to the very criticism levelled at some justices: deciding a case based on feelings and politics, rather than law," according to Rory Little, a professor at The University of California College of the Law, San Francisco.
By Elisa Reiter, Daniel Pollack and Jeffrey Siegel | December 27, 2023
"In cases involving minor children, we sometimes vary from standard operating procedure regarding how testimony can be presented, as well as stretching boundaries as to whether the witness is developmentally capable of presenting testimony. Should such distinctions continue?"
By Wynter L. Deagle, Anne-Marie D. Dao and Dane C. Brody Chanove | December 26, 2023
Just in time for the holidays, the plaintiffs' bar has gifted the business community with yet another newly minted privacy litigation theory, according to Sheppard Mullin's Wynter Deagle, Anne-Marie Dao and Dane Brody Chanove.
Corporate Counsel | Commentary
By Trudy Knockless | December 26, 2023
"You need to make sure there's good alignment between what the firm thinks it's being asked to do and what the in-house counsel is asking them to do," said Elliot Mark, the former general counsel at crisis-management software firm Everbridge.
By Julia Trankiem and JeeHyun Yoon | December 18, 2023
As 2023 draws to a close, employers should familiarize themselves with these new laws to ensure timely compliance, according to Hunton Andrews Kurth's Julia Trankiem and JeeHyun Yoon.
By Laura Lin and Rachel June-Graber | December 18, 2023
Next week, Fugees rapper Pras Michel is set to make his case for a new trial after his attorney allegedly violated ethics rules when he used an AI tool the lawyer invested in to draft a closing statement in the artist's foreign influence case. Ahead of the hearing, Simpson Thacher's Laura Lin and Rachel June-Graber break down the ways legal counsel can run afoul of ethics rules when using artificial intelligence.
By Channe G. Coles | December 15, 2023
Divorces among older adults, often termed "gray divorce," present distinct challenges compared to divorces at younger ages, according to family law attorney Channe Coles.
By Sushila Chanana and Vanessa K. Ing | December 15, 2023
Many more jury trials will be required if judges must refrain from deciding whether the purpose of a generative AI system's use of copyrighted material to learn language patterns is to produce a new product or to replicate the creative expression of the copyrighted material, according to Sushila Chanana and Vanessa K. Ing of Farella Braun + Martel.
By Monica Arnold and Michelle Armond | December 11, 2023
From life sciences to industrial designs to trade shows, these decisions spanned a wide variety of patent law issues and signal that Constitutional patent rights are still exploring new legal questions and breaking new ground almost 250 years after our nation's founding, says Armond Wilson's Monica Arnold and Michelle Armond.
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