By C. Ryan Barber | September 28, 2020
In an 18-page opinion, U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols found that TikTok, represented by a team from Covington & Burling, was likely to prevail in arguing that the Trump administration had overstepped in pushing to prevent future downloads of the app.
By C. Ryan Barber | September 10, 2020
"The fraud section and its partners deployed the first-in-class data analytics capabilities they have developed and employed to great effect in other criminal investigative areas," Brian Rabbitt, acting head of the Justice Department's criminal division, said in remarks Thursday.
By Cheryl Miller | August 17, 2020
The July 29 addendum said Becerra's office "may resubmit" the deleted sections "after further review and possible revision."
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Scott Colesanti and Savannah Aronson | July 29, 2020
A uniform response to the 10-year old cryptocurrency phenomenon remains only a remote possibility, as regulators waver between encouraging registration of digital offerings and halting/disciplining those online issuers offering Quixotic returns.
By Alaina Lancaster | July 23, 2020
U.S. District Judge James Donato said the updated settlement seemed to address his concerns but asked attorneys to get creative to increase claims rates. The Northern District of California judge said "this could be a breakthrough moment" for developing a model for large settlements involving online entities.
By Amanda Bronstad | July 22, 2020
In her Tuesday order, U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh signed off on the $117.5 million data breach settlement with Yahoo Inc. but slashed attorney fees by more than $7 million after concluding the deal was "unexceptional" and the legal work "not particularly novel."
By Alaina Lancaster | July 9, 2020
The court's decision in the case could resolve a circuit split regarding whether an automatic telephone dialing system needs to use a random or sequential number generator.
By Alaina Lancaster | May 13, 2020
Bottini & Bottini and Cotchett, Pitre and McCarthy filed the class action complaint after a bible study class hosted by Saint Paulus Lutheran Church on Zoom was infiltrated by a bad actor.
By Ryan Tarinelli | May 8, 2020
A surge in users revealed security flaws in Zoom's platform, according to New York Attorney General Letitia James' office, and the company had an increase in the sensitivity of the data passing via its network.
By Jason Grant | May 6, 2020
For sure, 2019 saw a lot of new suits. But on a year-over-year basis, it was "flat," said two Seyfarth Shaw partners who track the number of federal suits filed nationally. By contrast, from 2017 to 2018 there was "an explosive 177% increase" in the number of suits, from 814 to 2,258.
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