By Alaina Lancaster | July 31, 2020
"Today's charging announcement demonstrates that the elation of nefarious hacking into a secure environment for fun or profit will be short-lived," said U.S. Attorney David Anderson in a statement.
By Rhys Dipshan | July 20, 2020
Researchers say that scoring men and women differently is essential to account for risk assessment tools' inherent gender bias. But it's an open question whether these adjustments are violating state or constitutional law.
By Rhys Dipshan | Victoria Hudgins | July 17, 2020
Opponents of these risk assessment instruments say they're just making a bad situation worse. But proponents see them as a better way to address bias in the criminal justice system head on. So where do we go from here?
By Victoria Hudgins | July 1, 2020
Certain technology is becoming essential to corporations looking to avoid reputational and regulatory risk, and prosecutors aiming to track evidence of human trafficking online.
By Raychel Lean | June 26, 2020
"Merely wishing someone ill health in a public forum, without more, cannot serve as the legal basis for an injunction," the appeals panel ruled.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Peter A. Crusco | June 22, 2020
Peter Crusco's Cyber Crime column examines whether the discovery amendments actually accomplish their intent to further the cause of justice in New York, or instead impede that sacred mission.
By Phillip Bantz | June 16, 2020
Also, the company's former in-house leaders react to allegations that six ex-employees harassed and terrorized a blogger and her husband.
By Tom McParland | June 2, 2020
The ruling also allowed prosecutors to use Kings County Supreme Court Justice Sylvia Ash's emails, as well as statements she made to investigators and a grand jury, as evidence in the case.
By Ross Todd | June 2, 2020
U.S. District Judge William Alsup delayed until July 6 a trial that was set to resume next week in the case of a Russian man accused of hacking three Silicon Valley technology companies, citing juror concern about COVID-19 and the current civil unrest.
By David A. Carrillo and Matthew Stanford | May 27, 2020
While remote jury trials are technically feasible and legally plausible, the twin risks of procedural injustice and rampant retrials reduce their appeal.
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