0 results for 'FCC'
Nervous System: When Mobile Telephones Had Steering Wheels
The era of mobile telephony started much longer ago than one might imagine. On June 17, 1946, a man driving through the streets of St. Louis made a telephone call from his car—and thereby made history.Wiley Builds Telecom Team Amid Growing Activity From AI and Privacy Laws
Several D.C. law firms have been adding talent in their telecom practices, seeing work from AI advancements, new data privacy laws and other recent legislation.All Florida Robotext Class Action Lawyers Take Legal Setback in Pet Supermarket Ruling
"It is a major case establishing that there is no automatic standing in state court for receiving robotexts," said Aaron Weiss, a Carlton Fields shareholder.Supreme Court to Consider Overruling 'Chevron' Deference
Justices will examine whether courts should consider deferring to agency interpretations of ambiguous statutory authority.Litigator of the Week: A Pair of Big Wins for Motorola and Cellphone Makers in Brain Cancer Cases
Terry Dee of Winston & Strawn had a leading role for Motorola Mobility and its cellphone maker codefendants in a pair of wins last week—one in D.C. Superior Court and another in federal court in Louisiana.View more book results for the query "FCC"
Broadcasters Seek Court Order That FCC Conclude Media Ownership Review
The National Association of Broadcasters claims the Federal Communications Commission is in violation of the Telecommunications Act's quadrennial review mandate.Miami Dolphins Sues Organizer Over Botched Cruise Promotion
"Everything could have been worked out for everybody if we would have worked together," defendant Jeffrey Nahom said.'Robotexts and Calls Are Like the Whack-a-Mole Game': A Lawyer's Role in Fighting Unwanted Messaging
"Robotexts and calls are like the Whack-a-Mole game; once you stop one bad actor, another one pops up," says Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough partner Steven Augustino.'Ample Direction:' 5th Circ. Says FCC Fund Doesn't Violate Nondelegation Doctrine
"Rather than leave the FCC with 'no guidance whatsoever,' Congress provided ample direction for the FCC in [the statute]," Judge Carl Stewart wrote.Corporate Transparency Act Resource Kit
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Revenue, Profit, Cash: Managing Law Firms for Success
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Law Firm Operational Considerations for the Corporate Transparency Act
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The Ultimate Guide to Remote Legal Work
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