By Victoria Hudgins | May 11, 2021
More corporate legal departments are eyeing the impending influx of state-level data privacy laws as an opportunity to get ahead of the curve and provide privacy rights to all users. But that might be easier said than done, a Legalweek (year) 2021 panel notes.
By Rhys Dipshan | May 4, 2021
The state's pilot program allows nonlawyers to provide certain traditional legal services and already has 26 approved entities, including a nonlawyer-owned firm and an online legal service provider.
By Victoria Hudgins | April 23, 2021
Utah recently became the second state to enact an affirmative defense for data breaches. But complicated compliance and added responsibilities might scare some companies off from leveraging the legal mechanism.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Carol Lumpkin and Shawn Hogue | April 22, 2021
In a 2-1 decision, the panel in Gil v. Winn-Dixie Stores, held that websites are not within the 12 types of tangible physical places identified in 42 U.S.C. Section 12182(a), and it is the job of Congress, not courts, to decide this issue.
By Charles Toutant | April 8, 2021
"Without a court order or a gag order, the judiciary has no business telling somebody to take something down," said First Amendment lawyer Bruce Rosen.
By Alaina Lancaster | March 8, 2021
In a lawsuit filed by lawyers from Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr, the tech giant alleges that Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton violated Twitter's First Amendment rights when he issued an investigation into its content moderation practices days after banning President Donald Trump from the platform.
By Ryan Tarinelli | February 2, 2021
The report said survey respondents did "not appear to be properly protecting their personal devices through generally accepted security features, such as multifactor authentication, which puts court-related work at considerable risk."
By Jane Wester | January 27, 2021
The program in Manhattan Civil Court is part of the Unified Court System's statewide push to use technology and alternative dispute resolution to process cases and relieve some of the strain of the COVID-19 pandemic, which cut off access to most in-person trials.
By Angela Morris | January 27, 2021
A judge in Harris County's 333rd Civil District Court was recused from litigation after a party accused her of texting an opponent, before she took the bench, saying she would be willing to "help out behind the scenes."
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | January 5, 2021
Allowing an injured plaintiff to videoconference his family into the courtroom on monitors displayed to the jury is a step too far, according to one Pennsylvania judge.
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