By Cheryl Miller | September 13, 2021
The agreement ultimately brought together court labor unions, judges, lawyer groups and lawmakers.
By Cheryl Miller | August 26, 2021
Remote testimony is currently allowed under an emergency pandemic order aimed at reducing the number of people who enter California's courthouses.
By Rhys Dipshan | July 23, 2021
Change is likely coming for American attorneys. This spring and summer has shown across the country that the U.S. legal market may be poised become more open and flexible.
By Dara Kam | June 29, 2021
The controversial law seeks to prevent large social-media platforms from banning political candidates from their sites and to require companies to publish — and apply consistently — standards about issues such as banning users or blocking their content.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Patrick Hammon | June 9, 2021
Many in corporate America are taking a collective sigh of relief after last week's landmark decision in Van Buren v. United States, which set a few minds at ease about all those virtual game nights, family catch-ups and holiday celebrations employees hosted during the pandemic using their company-provided Zoom accounts or corporate-issued laptops.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Frank Nolan, MJ Wilson-Bilik and Emily Bork | June 4, 2021
As of July 9, a new addition to the City's administrative code will impose disclosure requirements for certain companies that collect, share, store, convert or retain consumer biometric information and separately prohibit the sale or sharing of such information.
By Angela Morris | May 26, 2021
"Persistent technical difficulties throughout the trial made it impossible for lead counsel to effectively present Kinder Morgan's case," argued Kinder Morgan Production Co. in its appellate brief.
By Charles Toutant | May 21, 2021
The two-factor system "doesn't reflect the reality of how people work" and would be more successful if the authorization codes were sent to a wider group of people, according to one lawyer.
By Angela Morris | May 20, 2021
"Taking this case off the non-jury docket which has no backlog and is up to date and resetting the case for a jury trial at some future date would delay the trial most likely by years," ruled 270th District Judge Dedra Davis of Houston in an order that has been overturned on appeal.
By Victoria Hudgins | May 18, 2021
Some legal service providers are avoiding time-limited "regulatory sandboxes" in favor of programs with an indefinite window.
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