By Ross Todd | September 10, 2018
The deal, which got sign-off from U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh on Friday, settles claims that the company misled investors about four breaches which touched up to 3 billion Yahoo accounts.
By R. Robin McDonald | September 5, 2018
Attorneys representing hundreds of consumer plaintiffs whose financial and personal information was exposed in a massive data breach at Equifax last year challenged arguments by the credit bureau's lawyers that no one suffered harm, and if they did, Equifax is not at fault.
By Amanda Bronstad | July 27, 2018
A federal judge in California has appointed two lawyers to lead class actions brought against Facebook Inc. over the Cambridge Analytica scandal over misuse of user data.
By Cheryl Miller | June 28, 2018
The California Data Privacy Protection Act requires data-collecting businesses to tell consumers what information they gather from them and who they share it with. It also forces companies to delete that information upon a consumer's request.
By Ross Todd | June 26, 2018
"If everything on the screen is written with conspicuous features, then nothing is conspicuous," wrote First Circuit Judge Juan Torruella of a link to Uber's user agreement in the app's sign-up pages.
By Cheryl Miller | June 25, 2018
When the final version of AB 375 went into print Monday, it was still unclear whether the bill will have the needed support—or at least lack of opposition—from a wide array of interests, including tech companies, the telecommunications industry, plaintiffs attorneys and consumer groups.
By Ana Tagvoryan, Jeffrey Rosenthal and Harrison Brown, Blank Rome | June 7, 2018
Recent legal trends can help distinguish between informational and transactional text communications, and those that may cross the line into marketing and advertising.
By C. Ryan Barber | June 1, 2018
The two FTC lawyers did not violate rights of LabMD's chief-executive, the D.C. Circuit said Friday, because the agency's enforcement action against had an alternative cause: a data breach that exposed a file containing the personal information of nearly 10,000 patients.
By Amanda Bronstad | May 11, 2018
Plaintiffs suing over a 2014 data breach at the U.S. Office of Personnel Management—which may have compromised information for 21.5 million persons—have asked a federal appeals court to revive their cases, citing a significant decision last year finding standing to sue over a cyberattack.
By Scott Flaherty | May 9, 2018
LabMD, a medical testing company mired in legal battles, alleges that Mary Beth Buchanan and Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner concealed key information in an FTC consumer protection case.
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