By Ben Hancock | November 30, 2017
Reporter Ben Hancock peers around the corner at the courtroom clashes and policy choices that loom over emerging technologies like AI, digital currency and facial recognition.
By Ben Hancock | November 3, 2017
An annual meeting of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers ended Friday without resolving a looming standoff between European privacy law and ICANN rules that help right holders identify IP infringers on the web.
Legaltech News | Analysis|News
By Rhys Dipshan | November 1, 2017
Though Microsoft dropped its case against the U.S. government after the policy change, the legal challenges gag orders face may be far from over.
By Tony Mauro | October 2, 2017
The solicitor general weighed in on the case, which could have had an impact on whether internet services and companies need to comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act.
By Cheryl Miller | September 21, 2017
Federal prosecutors want Google Inc. sanctioned for refusing to hand over government-sought emails stored on its overseas servers, according to documents filed Wednesday.
By Cheryl Miller | September 19, 2017
California Attorney General Xavier Becerra in Washington on Tuesday urged tech companies to "join us at the table" to craft federal legislation to crack down on online sex trafficking. The general counsel to the Internet Association, representing major U.S. companies, tells a U.S. Senate committee the bill "introduces overly broad concepts of criminal and civil liability."
By Ben Hancock | August 18, 2017
The web service provider says it doesn't need the money, but wants to create an outlet for internet users alarmed by a government request for data about visitors to an anti-Trump protest site.
By Ross Todd | July 28, 2017
Munger, Tolles & Olson partner Donald Verrilli and Harvard Law School professor Laurence Tribe squared off in a bet-the-company battle pitting the professional networking site against data analytics startup hiQ Labs.
By Cheryl Miller | July 13, 2017
An Airbnb host who refused to rent her Southern California house to a woman because she is Asian will pay $5,000 in damages and take a college-level course in Asian-American studies, the state Department of Fair Employment and Housing said Thursday in announcing the agreement.
By C. Ryan Barber | July 12, 2017
After nearly four years as the Federal Trade Commission's top antitrust enforcer, Debbie Feinstein is returning in September to Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer, where she will lead the global antitrust group, the firm said Wednesday.
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