By Ross Todd | July 3, 2017
LinkedIn claims that hiQ's scraping activities, which use data from public LinkedIn profiles to create analytics tools, were prohibited under the site's terms of service.
By Erin Mulvaney | June 27, 2017
Glassdoor general counsel Brad Serwin spoke on the case over whether the company can be forced to reveal identities of eight people who posted anonymous reviews.
By C. Ryan Barber | June 22, 2017
Since the dawn of the digital age, tech companies have grappled with the protection of privacy rights amid demands from foreign and domestic authorities seeking evidence for investigations. Those competing pressures have meant a tricky balancing act—but Google's top lawyer has some ideas for making it easier.
By David Gialanella | June 22, 2017
Avvo facilitates improper fee-splitting, while LegalZoom and Rocket Lawyer operate legal service plans that aren't registered with the judiciary, according to the June 21 opinion.
By Cheryl Miller | June 20, 2017
California on Monday joined more than a dozen other states in introducing internet privacy legislation after the repealing of Obama-era information sharing rules.
By Gabrielle Orum Hernandez | June 15, 2017
Panelists at Legalweek West look to demystify open source licensing for developers and attorneys.
By C. Ryan Barber | May 11, 2017
Months after Apple faced off with the FBI over an order to unlock an iPhone connected to the San Bernardino shooting investigation, Amazon.com Inc. was thrust center-stage in its own digital privacy debate when Arkansas prosecutors demanded data from a murder suspect's Echo device. Amazon initially objected to the demands last year, only to later grant access after the suspect consented to the release of the data. Speaking Thursday at a Consumer Federation of America conference in Washington, an in-house lawyer at Amazon stated flatly: "No, Echo is not spying on you."
By C. Ryan Barber | May 5, 2017
Jennifer Lopez, Nicole Polizzi, the "Jersey Shore" star better known as Snooki, and the former baksetball star Allen Iverson were among the celebrities the Federal Trade Commission recently sent letters to as part of the agency's push to promote clearer disclosures of business relationships in endorsement deals. The FTC in its announcement last month about the letters did not name any of the celebrities and stars who received them. The National Law Journal obtained the FTC letters through a records request.
By Ross Todd | May 3, 2017
Amicus briefs poured into the California Supreme Court from technology trade organizations and individual companies in Hassell v. Bird.
By Ben Hancock | April 28, 2017
A recent San Francisco case spotlights the particular challenges faced by Google's approach in waging courtroom battles over data storage.
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