By Ross Todd | December 19, 2019
Although U.S. District Judge Edward Davila dismissed claims brought under California privacy laws without leave to amend, he gave plaintiffs another shot at pleading their claims that Google violated users' right to privacy under the state's constitution.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Christopher Boehning and Daniel J. Toal | December 2, 2019
In their Federal E-Discovery column, Christopher Boehning and Daniel J. Toal discuss the recent case of 'Herzig v. Ark. Found. for Med. Care', which addresses the issue of ephemeral messaging and spoliation. The court there found that the use of the ephemeral messaging app Signal was evidence of bad faith sufficient to warrant sanctions.
By Nicolette Daniel | December 1, 2019
Google Assistant, Alexa and Cortana are just some of the voice assistants used in homes across the world today. This technology, combined with voice…
By Victoria Hudgins | November 15, 2019
Employees' collaboration and communication app usage is outpacing the ability of companies to implement policies. But the not-so-new art of text messaging still has a lot of companies concerned and uninformed, according to a new survey.
By Charles Toutant | November 15, 2019
Online transactions now make up 11% of all retail transactions in the United States, New Jersey Appellate Division Judge Jack Sabatino wrote in the ruling.
By Alaina Lancaster | November 5, 2019
The suit, which began in 2015, alleged that the telecommunications company slowed data speeds despite the fact that customers had purchased unlimited mobile data plans.
By Alaina Lancaster | October 25, 2019
Judge Brian Walsh of Santa Clara Superior Court wrote that he was not persuaded YouTube's unrestricted mode and advertising platform "are freely open to the public or are the functional equivalent of a traditional public forum like a town square or a central business district."
By Frank Ready | October 24, 2019
It may be now or never for making changes to the rules governing the responsibility online content platforms have for content posted to their sites. But there are still tough questions bogging down the process.
By Frank Ready | October 2, 2019
An appeals court ruled on Tuesday that states can implement their own net neutrality laws. However, for internet service providers keeping score, the real changes could just be getting started.
By Krishnan Nair | September 24, 2019
The European Union's Court of Justice said that EU data protection law was not designed to be applied outside the territory of the bloc's 28 members.
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