By Amanda Bronstad | September 18, 2020
Class counsel in the $650 million biometric privacy settlement with Facebook have filed an emergency motion for a temporary restraining order that would halt what it calls a misleading advertisement from Levi & Korsinky, which is soliciting class members to opt out of the agreement.
By Hannah Roberts | September 18, 2020
The UK regulator issued the sanction in the latest example of a crackdown on lawyer conduct.
By Dan Packel | September 15, 2020
Like the rest of the details of the arrangement, the firm representing Oracle is shrouded in mystery. But the proceeding before the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. is just another example of how high profile this work has become in the Trump era.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Aron Solomon | September 11, 2020
After a global soft launch in places such as Brazil, Reels launched in the United States in early August and has become wildly popular in many social media circles.
Legaltech News | Expert Opinion
By Anne C. Witt, EDHEC Business School | September 8, 2020
The tech giant will now have to decide whether to adopt a different data collection policy for the German market than it does for the rest of the world.
By Victoria Hudgins | September 1, 2020
Ethical obligations won't stand in the way of lawyers looking to leverage Reddit for business development. But lawyers might struggle to get over the platform's "bad rap" and a possible threat to attorney-client privilege.
By Zach Warren | August 27, 2020
One lawsuit alleges that marketing companies gathered user data by paying app developers to install a "malicious" software development kit in their apps, while another allege that a business owner illegally sold fake engagement on Instagram.
By Alaina Lancaster | August 24, 2020
Covington & Burling's Beth Brinkmann and John Hall are representing TikTok in a challenge to an executive order banning the app in the U.S.
By Alaina Lancaster | August 21, 2020
The lawsuit claims that the White House has failed to provide evidence to support claims that WeChat compromises national security, but noted that the executive order was issued in the run-up to the 2020 presidential election, "during a time when President Trump has made numerous anti-Chinese statements that have contributed to and incited racial animus against persons of Chinese descent."
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Shari Claire Lewis | August 17, 2020
For as long as companies have used internet applications, private and publicly owned businesses, law firms and other professional services organizations, and even public entities have faced potentially devastating financial harm and loss of public good will from "business email compromise" (BEC) fraud, writes Internet Issues/Social Media columnist Shari Claire Lewis.
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