By Ben Hancock | December 7, 2017
Uber is in the hot seat for its use of messaging apps such as Wickr with self-destruct features. But legal experts say evidence rules don't preclude such tools, and Wickr's CEO warns against "stigmatizing" information security.
By Ross Todd | December 6, 2017
The rare, if not unprecedented move, to hand over a piece of evidence that surfaced in a parallel criminal investigation has former prosecutors abuzz.
By Ben Hancock | November 29, 2017
According to testimony in Waymo's trade secrets case against Uber, Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr was retained to lead an investigation after an ex-employee in May made far-ranging allegations of corporate misbehavior.
By Ben Hancock | November 29, 2017
An Uber in-house attorney testified Wednesday that Wilmer was retained to lead an investigation after an ex-employee in May made far-ranging allegations of corporate misbehavior.
By Ross Todd | Caroline Spiezio | November 28, 2017
Judge William Alsup told Uber's legal team he can't trust what they say because they've "lied so many times."
By Ross Todd | November 14, 2017
Shin won a complete defense verdict for McKesson Corp. in a long-running trade secret case after subbing in for prior counsel five months before trial.
By Ben Hancock | November 3, 2017
The judge overseeing Waymo's case against Uber won't allow a damages expert whose calculations were behind the figure to testify at trial.
Daily Report Online | News|Update
By Greg Land | November 2, 2017
The Georgia Supreme Court has remanded a case over whether records of Northside Hospital are covered by the state's Open Records Act. The records were sought by a lawyer representing an unidentified client who argued that they are public documents because Northside's facilities are owned by the Fulton County Hospital Authority.
By Amanda Ciccatelli | November 1, 2017
Today, the reality is that what qualifies as confidential information touches on virtually every single practice area. Confidential information is…
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Jonathan S. Cohen | October 27, 2017
By its 1291 law, the Republic of Venice moved all its glassblowers to the nearby island of Murano, ostensibly to protect Venice's wooden buildings from catching fire from the trade's furnaces. But a subsequent 1295 law preventing them from leaving Murano confirmed the authorities' real concern: to prevent the glassblowers from disclosing the trade secrets of their lucrative business outside the republic.
Presented by BigVoodoo
This conference aims to help insurers and litigators better manage complex claims and litigation.
Recognizing innovation in the legal technology sector for working on precedent-setting, game-changing projects and initiatives.
Legalweek New York explores Business and Regulatory Trends, Technology and Talent drivers impacting law firms.
McCarter & English is actively seeking a 5th-6th year trademark associate who has trademark prosecution, licensing and litigation experi...
**PLEASE READ THE COMPLETE AD BEFORE APPLYING***Established 25-year boutique Plaintiff's Personal Injury Law Firm in the Dadeland area seeki...
Our client, a multi-state full-service boutique, is seeking to add a senior construction litigation associate to their Florida team. Qualif...