By Michael A. Mora | April 17, 2023
Shaquille O'Neal has been "hiding and driving away from our process servers for the past three months," Adam M. Moskowitz, the managing partner at the Moskowitz Law Firm, alleged.
Corporate Counsel | Best Practices
By Maria Dinzeo | April 12, 2023
"With this level of breach that can and will happen, you can't afford to take a wait-and-see approach if you are managing sensitive data," said Rebecca Krauthamer, co-founder of quantum cybersecurity software firm QuSecure.
By Maria Dinzeo | March 22, 2023
Irina Dilkinska was arrested in Bulgaria on Monday and extradited to the United States the next day. Prosecutors say she helped perpetuate a wide-ranging scheme with millions of victims and billions of dollars in losses.
Corporate Counsel | Analysis|Best Practices
By Maria Dinzeo | March 7, 2023
Ex-Uber security chief Joe Sullivan "is being punished for something that actually happens all the time, and for which we don't have good legal guidance," former Facebook security chief Alex Stamos said.
By Charles Toutant | March 6, 2023
Lawyers who are typically adversaries were on the same side of the case.
National Law Journal | Analysis
By Christine Schiffner | February 28, 2023
The Biden administration is ramping up antitrust investigations against Big Tech and other industry sectors. Meanwhile, attorneys are eyeing climate change and artificial intelligence as potential areas of future antitrust litigation.
By Allison Dunn | February 24, 2023
Liberty claimed that Lamb's Evernote software data, physical data, iPhone, data, and metadata that existed was not produced through discovery.
By Brad Kutner | February 14, 2023
"I spend most of my waking hours thinking about the regulation of these assets and I love it. I just wish the law was clearer so companies will know what is required to bring crypto products to market," said K&L Gates partner Andrew Hinkes.
By Allison Dunn | February 9, 2023
Finding courts in the First Circuit have yet to address the framework for determining whether online terms were sufficiently disclosed to provide a consent defense to a Telephone Consumer Protection Act, the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts relied on recent Ninth Circuit case law in allowing a putative class action to proceed.
By Gareth Evans, Daniel Zagoren, and Ana Cabassa-Torres, Redgrave LLP | February 7, 2023
The Supreme Court dismissed In re Grand Jury on the grounds that certiorari was improvidently granted, rather than taking the opportunity to provide guidance on attorney-client privilege protection for "dual-purpose" communications.
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