By Isha Marathe | April 6, 2023
Iowa's data privacy law may be the most business-friendly law yet, signaling how a state's characteristics, such as its politics and tech composition, affects its regulations, and make the growing data privacy patchwork even more nuanced.
By Emily Saul | March 28, 2023
Michael Cohen waived attorney-client privilege with Robert Costello, but what about a lawyer's duty of loyalty?
The American Lawyer | Analysis
By Jessie Yount | March 15, 2023
"This is of interest to everyone and my mother because it has so much potential to impact people, both good and potentially bad," Gibson Dunn's AI leader Vivek Mohan said. "People want to see responsibility and guardrails put in place, to unlock the opportunity of the tech while not having us end up like 'Terminator 2.'"
By Charles Toutant | March 9, 2023
One lawyer compared the hospital suits to data breach litigation, where "courts have been all over the place" about what compensation to award to claimants.
By Allison Dunn | March 3, 2023
"Virginia has a very unique view of data privacy," Beth Burgin Waller, Chair of the Cybersecurity & Data Privacy Practice at Woods Rogers, told Law.com. "If you looked at when this hit, you were really coming at an emerging time when you had Europe with [General Data Protection Regulation] GDRP and California with CCPA. Out of the gate—out-of-nowhere, almost—it felt like Virginia came running to the scene with the CDPA, the Consumer Data Protection Act."
By Amanda Bronstad | March 2, 2023
At Thursday's preliminary approval hearing in the Cambridge Analytica settlement with Facebook, U.S. District Judge Vince Chhabria repeatedly sparred with Corban Rhodes, an attorney for the New Mexico Attorney General's Office, who intervened this week to raise questions about the release.
By Jessie Yount | March 1, 2023
Lynn Parker Dupree joined the firm in D.C. to lead its new privacy practice.
National Law Journal | Analysis
By Christine Schiffner | February 28, 2023
The Biden administration is ramping up antitrust investigations against Big Tech and other industry sectors. Meanwhile, attorneys are eyeing climate change and artificial intelligence as potential areas of future antitrust litigation.
By Brad Kutner | February 10, 2023
"As a more educated society on how invasive data tracking of our internet browsing can be, you're seeing more and more cases related to internet privacy," said Peiffer Wolf Carr Kane Conway & Wise partner Brandon Wise.
By Amanda Bronstad | February 9, 2023
"This case is an example of a wealthy client (Facebook) and its high-powered law firm (Gibson Dunn) using delay, misdirection, and frivolous arguments to make litigation unfairly difficult and expensive for their opponents," U.S. District Judge Vince Chhabria ruled.
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