By Ben Hancock | March 13, 2018
The legislation alternately known as SESTA and FOSTA has gone through multiple iterations. Depending on who you talk to, the latest version is either a welcome compromise or the "worst of both worlds" for internet companies.
By C. Ryan Barber | March 9, 2018
Facebook said the compliance counsel would "advise on legal and regulatory compliance matters across the company, including in the areas of campaign finance and political advertising law, lobbying reporting, political activities and ethics, anti-corruption and global trade."
By Marcia Coyle | March 7, 2018
In April, the two justices likely will align in the multibillion-dollar battle over state taxation of online retail sales.
By Ben Hancock | February 14, 2018
David Howard said customer worries about other countries' laws helped drive Microsoft's decision to fight U.S. law enforcement over access to foreign-stored data. Oral arguments are later this month.
By C. Ryan Barber | January 30, 2018
Lawyers for Amazon, represented by the Greenville, South Carolina, firm Gallivan, White & Boyd, contend the consumers' claims must go to arbitration and that, additionally, the company is immune from liability under the federal Communications Decency Act.
By Ben Hancock | January 19, 2018
A win for the U.S. government in a case over emails stored in Ireland would violate EU data privacy law, they argue.
By Cogan Schneier | January 16, 2018
Attorneys general from 21 states and the District of Columbia filed a challenge to the repeal of the Obama-era rules.
By Ross Todd | January 5, 2018
DOJ lawyers said the president's tweet linking any deal to reinstate DACA with funding for his controversial border wall shouldn't affect litigation challenging the rescission of the program.
By Erin Mulvaney | December 20, 2017
The suit claims that by targeting employment ads to younger workers—in age ranges of 18 to 40, or 22 to 45, for instance—employers are violating laws that prohibit discrimination in employment advertising, recruiting and hiring.
By Josefa Velasquez | December 4, 2017
The FCC's Office of Inspector General has agreed to cooperate with New York's investigation into thousands of comments on net neutrality that were posted to the commission's website allegedly without the knowledge or consent of the individuals, New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman said Monday. An FCC Commissioner also asked the Dec. 14 hearing be postponed until an investigation is complete.
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