Legaltech News | Expert Opinion
By Prof. Dr. Gianclaudio Malgieri | February 4, 2021
France is a battlefield for the question: Are cookie-walls allowed under EU data protection law or not?
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | January 28, 2021
A federal judge in Pennsylvania has ruled that a woman who was injured during a bus tour in New Zealand can sue travel website Tripadvisor for its role in helping her book the excursion where she was hurt.
By Phillip Bantz | January 5, 2021
Tod Cohen returned to private practice because he "found that the issues that matter to clients, the most difficult, most challenging, most cutting-edge legal issues are handled by outside counsel."
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Jonathan Bick | November 13, 2020
It is likely that the United States will continue to be both an internet technology and internet law global leader. As such, American internet law will prospectively have global influence.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Joshua A. Mooney and Linda D. Perkins | October 30, 2020
On Oct. 1, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) and the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) in the U.S. Department of the Treasury collectively issued a pair of advisories warning ransomware victims, their insurers, and their incident response teams of potential sanctions for facilitating a ransomware payment.
By Joe Giovannoli | October 22, 2020
What does Mobile First Indexing mean for your law firm?
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Shari Claire Lewis | October 19, 2020
One of the most powerful tools available to fight COVID-19 is known as "contact tracing," which has long been used to limit the spread of everything from tuberculosis and measles to HIV and Ebola, writes Internet Issues/Social Media columnist Shari Claire Lewis.
By Jason Grant | September 29, 2020
Five plaintiffs-side firms are behind more than 73% of all New York ADA website-accessibility federal filings, "which shows this is an extremely focused effort," said UsableNet, which conducted the research.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Shari Claire Lewis | August 17, 2020
For as long as companies have used internet applications, private and publicly owned businesses, law firms and other professional services organizations, and even public entities have faced potentially devastating financial harm and loss of public good will from "business email compromise" (BEC) fraud, writes Internet Issues/Social Media columnist Shari Claire Lewis.
By Jason Grant | August 7, 2020
"We're pleased that the Army intends to unban the users who were banned for engaging in core political speech, and we look forward to reviewing the Army's new moderation policies," said the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University in a statement Wednesday.
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