By Recorder staff | November 7, 2019
The firm received the award Wednesday night at The Recorder's California Leaders in Tech Law and Innovation Awards based on its work on behalf of Electronic Arts, Google and Facebook
By Recorder staff | November 6, 2019
The defendants allegedly accessed the email addresses, IP addresses and dates of birth attached to Twitter accounts to feed back to Saudi officials.
By Alaina Lancaster | Ross Todd | November 6, 2019
A court petition for documents related to Facebook's Cambridge Analytica scandal marks Becerra's office's first public foray into the swirl of litigation against the company.
By Amr Razzak, Stacy Kray and Kelsey Merrick | November 6, 2019
The circumstances under which electronic communications will cross the line from protected free speech to illegal conduct are fact-specific and quickly evolving.
By Alaina Lancaster | November 5, 2019
The suit, which began in 2015, alleged that the telecommunications company slowed data speeds despite the fact that customers had purchased unlimited mobile data plans.
By Karen Sloan | November 5, 2019
Attorney John Paul Szymkowicz has sued a blogger who tracks attorney discipline cases across the country and the Law Professor Blogs LLC, a blogging network owned by Paul Caron, dean of Pepperdine University Rick J. Caruso School of Law.
By Recorder staff | November 5, 2019
"We are constantly evolving how we work and looking for ways to work more efficiently, invest our resources wisely (whether through fixed-fee arrangements, redesigning processes or leveraging impactful technology), and to lead the way on important topics like diversity and wellness," says GC Matt Fawcett.
By Recorder staff | November 5, 2019
"We love to understand our clients' businesses and 'own' their problems and challenges as if they were ours, and we try hard to reflect our clients in terms of how we interact with them and among each other," said Matthew Bartus and Peter Werner, of Cooley's global emerging companies and venture capital practice.
By Alaina Lancaster | November 4, 2019
In addition to repurposing regulatory production documents, a federal judge could ask the company to provide more information on how its millions of apps interact with users. Gibson Dunn's Orin Snyder rebutted that there were "not enough engineers on the globe" to perform the task.
By Karen Sloan | November 4, 2019
The Engelberg Center on Innovation Law & Policy at New York University School of Law has solicited harrowing workplace tales from in-house lawyers at tech companies and hired actors to perform them as monologues during the Nov. 18 Legal Madness open mic night.
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