The lights are still on, and canned goods are on grocery shelves–but Y2K lawyers aren’t willing to declare the crisis over.
And even if Doomsday never dawns, a dispute is developing over who should bear the costs of compliance.
The lights are still on, and canned goods are on grocery shelves -- but Y2K lawyers aren't willing to declare the crisis over. And even if Doomsday never dawns, a dispute is developing over who should bear the costs of compliance. "It's premature to be declaring victory over the Y2K issue, and that's not wishful thinking on the part of a law firm," said Jeffrey S. White, head of litigation and the Y2K group at San Francisco's Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe.
January 11, 2000 at 12:00 AM
1 minute read
The original version of this story was published on Law.Com
The lights are still on, and canned goods are on grocery shelves–but Y2K lawyers aren’t willing to declare the crisis over.
And even if Doomsday never dawns, a dispute is developing over who should bear the costs of compliance.
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