Legaltech News | Analysis|Investigation
By Ian Lopez | April 16, 2018
In the ongoing investigation involving evidence of varying data types from various sources, questions over evidence production and review loom.
By Ben Hancock | March 28, 2018
In the first such decision in the Ninth Circuit, a federal magistrate judge ruled that a criminal defendant could be compelled to unlock encrypted data because prosecutors could show that he knew the passwords.
By Ross Todd | March 20, 2018
Paul Grewal, the Facebook in-house lawyer who has had the unenviable task of being the company's public voice addressing the Cambridge Analytica scandal, has a history of engaging with thorny privacy issues going back to his days on the federal bench in San Jose.
By Erin Mulvaney | February 16, 2018
A six-page internal "advice" memo from the NLRB said Google did not violate labor law when it fired James Damore for writing a memo that argued in part that women were less fit than men for careers in tech.
By Ben Hancock | November 28, 2017
In a new podcast, Law.com talks with the lead attorney arguing against the government in Carpenter v. U.S., a case set to be argued before the U.S. Supreme Court this week that tests the limits of privacy when it comes to cellular location data.
By Cogan Schneier | November 13, 2017
Chief Judge Robert Morin of the D.C. Superior Court ruled that the warrants could intrude on innocent Facebook users' Fourth and First amendment rights.
By Scott Graham | October 27, 2017
Sorry comic fans. The Ninth Circuit thinks an upcoming trademark trial between two of your biggest annual conventions is "banal" and a "run of the mill" civil proceeding.
By Cogan Schneier | October 13, 2017
The ACLU asked the court to block or, at least, narrow a government search warrant for three Facebook accounts in connection with an investigation into criminal rioting on Inauguration Day.
By Ed Silverstein | September 29, 2017
The European Commission recently released guidelines for online platforms aimed to prevent, detect and remove content that incites hatred, violence and terrorism online.
By Cogan Schneier | September 28, 2017
The motion asks the court to either quash the warrants or appoint a "special master" to review the information on the accounts before it's handed over to federal prosecutors.
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