By Gail J. Cohen | March 7, 2024
A Canadian grain farmer argued his casual response to a text meant he'd received the message, not agreed to a full contract with a grain buyer.
By Lisa Willis | March 4, 2024
"[The] decision also benefits all attorneys representing their clients, in ensuring that attorneys cannot be bound by contractual provisions they did not agree to, and would not agree to," defense counsel said.
By Riley Brennan | February 13, 2024
The court ruled that websites' hyperlinking to the companies' terms of use section was sufficient notice of the arbitration provision in underlying litigation group of consumers filed six class actions
By Avalon Zoppo | January 30, 2024
The appeals court would require attorneys who used AI in drafting a filing to certify that the citations, legal analysis and any other text have "been reviewed for accuracy and approved by a human."
By Avalon Zoppo | January 17, 2024
The federal appeals court considers whether the social media site could be held liable for a child's death.
By Colleen Murphy | January 5, 2024
"Therefore, dismissal warns plaintiffs and their attorney that their behavior will not be tolerated and that their conduct was so egregious as to cause them to suffer a 'drastic remedy'—the loss of their cause of action," the Appellate Division said. "Moreover, it informs other litigants that they risk dismissal if they commit a fraud on the court."
By Allison Dunn | January 5, 2024
The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court is considering whether Uber's pop-up screen gave reasonable notice of the rideshare company's updated terms that would limit a registered rider's $63 million damages claim to arbitration after he suffered paralyzing injuries in a crash.
By Avalon Zoppo | December 19, 2023
The dissenting judges fell a vote short of reconsidering the Communication Decency Act's immunity provision.
By Avalon Zoppo | December 1, 2023
"Do you want to be the lawyer advertising that you didn't do all your own work?" law professor Joseph Regalia said of the deterrent effect of AI disclosure.
By Stephanie Wilkins | November 8, 2023
"To be clear, we've got more than 70 applications running this technology, more than 10 million API calls a month. It's been up and running for almost two years now. So we considered it pretty battle-tested technology," says EyeLevel.ai co-founder and COO Neil Katz about allegations that the technology is "experimental."
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