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Legaltech News

If the Shoe Fits: Leveraging E-Discovery Expertise for DPO Responsibilities and GDPR Compliance

The EU's additional guidance around the data protection officer has generated significant buzz.
9 minute read

Legaltech News

What to Expect in FTC Privacy Enforcement During the Trump Administration

A look at how a Republican majority may impact the focus of the FTC.
10 minute read

Legaltech News

Gibson Dunn Hires Four-Lawyer A&O Technology Team in Paris

The firm says global clients are "increasingly turning to us for advice on data privacy, cybersecurity, digital transformation and outsourcing matters."
21 minute read

Legaltech News

Search Warrants for IoT Data Spur Legal, Privacy Complications

Law enforcement attempts to access Amazon Echo raise questions over the viability of IoT data in investigations and the vulnerability of private information.
9 minute read

The Recorder

Novel Suits, Setbacks Mark Edelson's First Year in Calif.

The small plaintiffs firm set out to disrupt privacy litigation when it launched a Bay Area office led by partner Rafey Balabanian. So far, returns are mixed.
21 minute read

Legaltech News

Cyber Becomes Mainstream: The Lessons Learned for 2017

These three lessons impact our daily lives as professionals, as well as citizens.
6 minute read

New York Law Journal

Cuomo Promises New Cybersecurity Measures in 2017

New York's governor will propose tougher measures to combat cyber-crime in his State of the State addresses starting Jan. 9, including graduated penalties for computer tampering crimes and identity thefts.
7 minute read

The Legal Intelligencer

The Downfall of Privacy and the Enforcement of the Law

Privacy has always been a somewhat ephemeral concept. We do not protect privacy as such in the Constitution of the United States. However, the courts see privacy as a penumbra of several constitutional protections. What the courts have done is to create a metaphor between privacy and a solar eclipse. During a total solar eclipse, there is the appearance of a ring of fire seen around the moon. That ring is something that scientists call the penumbra. Therefore, while privacy is not explicitly mentioned in the Constitution, we can see it as a ring around the Bill of Rights.
10 minute read

National Law Journal

New FTC Contest Confronts 'Internet of Things' Security

Internet wonks call it the Internet of Things, or IoT—those everyday devices, gadgets and appliances that connect to the web. They are vulnerable. An October hacking of hundreds of thousands of "things"—including cameras and digital video recorders—disrupted the web. The Federal Trade Commission wants to do something about it—and you can help. The agency on Wednesday announced the latest in a series of cash-reward contests for solutions to protect personal data.
6 minute read

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