By Ben Hancock | March 13, 2018
The legislation alternately known as SESTA and FOSTA has gone through multiple iterations. Depending on who you talk to, the latest version is either a welcome compromise or the "worst of both worlds" for internet companies.
By Ross Todd | March 6, 2018
The justices on Tuesday heard a case that could determine how much pretrial access criminal defendants can get to witnesses' social media accounts.
By Marcia Coyle | February 27, 2018
"I think the starting point all would agree, in what was it, 1986, no one ever heard of clouds," Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said to the DOJ's Michael Dreeben on Tuesday in the data-privacy case United States v. Microsoft.
By Ross Todd | February 26, 2018
The federal criminal trial of former Autonomy CFO Sushovan Hussain will undoubtedly be heavy on accounting jargon and financial details as it unwinds over the next couple of months in District Judge Charles Breyer's courtroom.
By David Kalat, Berkeley Research Group | February 5, 2018
'Nervous System,' which approaches issues of data privacy and cybersecurity from the context of history, kicks off with a look at Milo Arthur Bennett's 1960s computer escapades.
By Angela Morris | January 25, 2018
Big and small firms alike, as well as solo practitioners, are accepting cryptocurrency's risks in order to meet clients' needs and get paid.
By Ross Todd | January 17, 2018
U.S. District Judge Jon Tigar asked federal prosecutors to investigate nearly 6,000 potentially bogus claims submitted in a $5.3 million settlement with app makers, including Twitter, Instagram and Yelp.
By Ben Hancock | December 20, 2017
LegalThings is an Amsterdam-based digital contracts company that's aiming to update how those accused of a crime move through the justice system by making the law accessible while making judicial record-keeping more open and secure.
By Colby Hamilton | November 21, 2017
According to prosecutors, the Iranian national formerly worked for the military before hacking HBO's network, and then attempting to ransom the company' shows and information for $6 million.
By Cogan Schneier | November 13, 2017
Chief Judge Robert Morin of the D.C. Superior Court ruled that the warrants could intrude on innocent Facebook users' Fourth and First amendment rights.
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