New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Stephen M. Kramarsky and John Millson | May 16, 2022
This article discusses a recent case out of the Southern District of New York that involved application of a hastily-crafted statute (passed in 1988 to regulate video rental stores) to a TikTok competitor. The court's opinion on a motion to dismiss is an informative overview of privacy laws and the challenges they present to the modern legal system.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Saliann Scarpulla, Julie North and Scott Reents | May 10, 2022
The overhaul of its e-discovery rules positions the New York Commercial Division as a leader in this area and, as a result, an attractive forum for businesses looking to resolve their significant litigation matters.
By Rhys Dipshan | May 9, 2022
Law firms are diving into new and unpredictable areas such as the metaverse and the blockchain, exploring the viability of such technologies for the legal market and potentially paving the way for others to follow.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Annmarie Giblin | May 9, 2022
In 'Calhoun v. Google', the Northern District of California significantly expanded a "growing trend across courts … to recognize the lost property value" of data and affirmatively held that people have a "property interest in their personal information."
By Adolfo Pesquera | May 6, 2022
"We think there are greater forces at play in a couple of lawsuits in New York," the attorney said. "This lawsuit is meant to derail that litigation."
By Rhys Dipshan | May 4, 2022
Law firms that are developing predictive analytics tools see an opportunity in a market long dominated by legal tech providers. But it's an open questions whether more firms will jump in.
By Rhys Dipshan | April 28, 2022
More data and continuous training means AI will only become better at predicting legal outcomes. But predictive analytics' accuracy will likely never reach a point where lawyers are turning the keys over to machines entirely.
By Jeff Cox, Unicourt | April 27, 2022
The second part of this three-part series explores trends in data structuring, including what unstructured data is and how the legal industry is working to move from unstructured to structured data.
By Rhys Dipshan | April 21, 2022
The addition of federal appellate court data to Lex Machina includes almost 400,000 circuit court cases from all 13 federal circuits.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Shari Claire Lewis | April 18, 2022
Although the Health Breach Notification Rule has long been available to the FTC, the FTC has not actively enforced it. However, the FTC now appears to be poised to changing its approach. It has signaled renewed interest in the Rule, largely in recognition of the evolution of technology and health care since the Rule's passage that has caused an explosive expansion of the amount of health data collected by organizations and entities that are not otherwise governed by HIPAA and its progeny.
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