By Cheryl Miller | March 17, 2023
The unanimous three-judge panel said Uber and Postmates made a viable argument that legislatively provided exemptions to California's worker classification law "were the result of 'lobbying' and 'backroom dealing' as opposed to adherence to the stated purpose of the legislation."
By Katie Hall | March 14, 2023
The Texas Legislature previously passed legislation empowering private citizens to sue anyone who "aids or abets" an abortion after about six weeks of pregnancy.
By Alaina Lancaster | March 14, 2023
A California appeals court ruling largely flips an August 2021 decision finding Prop 22 encroached on the Legislature's constitutional authority.
By Cheryl Miller | March 7, 2023
Lawmakers appeared to support continued, limited use of video appearances in some court matters but electronic recording still faces significant opposition from court reporters and their labor unions.
By Allison Dunn | March 3, 2023
"Virginia has a very unique view of data privacy," Beth Burgin Waller, Chair of the Cybersecurity & Data Privacy Practice at Woods Rogers, told Law.com. "If you looked at when this hit, you were really coming at an emerging time when you had Europe with [General Data Protection Regulation] GDRP and California with CCPA. Out of the gate—out-of-nowhere, almost—it felt like Virginia came running to the scene with the CDPA, the Consumer Data Protection Act."
By Avalon Zoppo | February 22, 2023
Appellate courts are now grappling with an amendment that carved out an exception to immunity under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act.
National Law Journal | Analysis
By Christine Schiffner | January 24, 2023
As regulators struggle for a cryptocurrency rule book, law firms focus on risk mitigation.
By Allison Dunn | January 17, 2023
"It's a very novel case," said one of the plaintiff's attorneys, Anthony May, an associate with Brown Goldstein & Levy. "... [T]his is one of the first cases in the federal space to really determine these issues that intersect with civil rights and these arguments that there's some sort of religious freedom. "
By Alaina Lancaster | Zack Needles | January 12, 2023
In this week's episode, Amir Ghavi of Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson discusses the copyright concerns involved in AI-generated art.
By Brian Lee | December 20, 2022
Buffalo filed suit against multiple defendants, including Bushmaster Firearms, Vintage Firearms, Smith & Wesson Brands, Beretta USA Corp., Colt's Manufacturing Co., and Glock.
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