By Charles Toutant | January 25, 2024
"I'd like to believe that somehow this lawsuit spurred them on to really take a hard look at the kind of diversity that they have," the plaintiffs' counsel said.
The Legal Intelligencer | Analysis
By Aleeza Furman | January 25, 2024
For the third year in a row, court data shows, Philadelphia juries were around twice as likely to award verdicts of $1 million or higher than they were in the years before the COVID-19 pandemic.
By Jimmy Hoover | January 25, 2024
Once Ronald Reagan's aggressive SG, Fried came to criticize the modern GOP.
By Adolfo Pesquera | January 25, 2024
"There is no evidence to suggest Monticello should have anticipated that Red River's employees would attempt to perform this task themselves, or that it knew or should have known the pole could not be moved safely," Justice Amanda Reichek stated for the majority.
By Cedra Mayfield | January 25, 2024
"This is an issue that we are closely monitoring, and we will consider any changes that are in the interest of the Bar and its members," said State Bar of Georgia General Counsel Paula Frederick.
By Hugo Guzman | January 25, 2024
At issue is who owns the rights to projects that employees develop on their own time without the use of their company's resources.
By Charlotte Johnstone | January 25, 2024
Current and former firm personnel say that lawyers participating in the scheme could be limiting their partnership prospects as other industry commentators point to the policy's lack of flexibility.
By Stephanie Wilkins | January 24, 2024
Lori Cohen achieved an impressive 58 defense verdicts before suddenly and inexplicably losing her voice. Now, with the help of her long-time trial technologist and friend Gerard Buitrago, she's harnessing the power of AI to get back in the courtroom.
International Edition | Analysis
By Linda A. Thompson | January 24, 2024
The high-profile case before the International Court of Justice accusing Israel of genocide demonstrates both the promise and limitations of international law, experts say.
Daily Report Online | Analysis|Commentary|Event
By Alex Anteau | January 24, 2024
If user inputs are used to train models such as ChatGPT, can lawyers input their clients confidential information when generating motions, briefs or patent applications? How does scraped data used to train AI co-exist with the right to be forgotten? And when it comes to filing patents and copyrights for works produced by AI, who owns it?
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