New York Law Journal | Analysis
By David R. Owen | July 15, 2019
The only proven way for an organization to beat a ransomware attack is to ensure it never becomes a victim in the first place.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By R. David Lane Jr. | July 12, 2019
Many practitioners outside of the privacy and data security space may not appreciate the variety of incidents that can potentially give rise to data breach notification obligations.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Evan T. Barr | June 24, 2019
Should fingerprints and facial recognition be treated more like passcodes and passwords in the smartphone context? Two recent cases reflect a split of authority on that question.
By Dan Packel | June 13, 2019
"Data is the primary asset class of the 21st century," said new practice head Mark Melodia, who's taking over after the previous leaders decamped for Manatt last week.
By Amanda Bronstad | June 11, 2019
A pair of class actions seeks statutory damages on behalf of children in nine states whose conversations were recorded by an Alexa-enabled device, like Echo and Echo Dot.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Robert J. Anello and Richard F. Albert | June 11, 2019
In their White-Collar Crime column, Robert J. Anello and Richard F. Albert write: A natural tension results from private interests and the government's interest in access to encrypted communications used to further criminal and terroristic conduct. The balancing of these competing concerns is at the crux of most encryption-related debates.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Katherine B. Forrest | June 3, 2019
As Americans, we are used to certain protections for speech—rights arising from the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Does or will a “talking AI machine” have the same rights? Do we want them to? Do we need them to?
By Steven Perlstein, Benjamin Sauter and Beau Barnes | May 31, 2019
Bots add value by facilitating the execution of online tasks at speeds and scales unreachable by human users. But the ubiquity of bots has a dark side, threatening both governmental and commercial institutions.
By Linda A. Malek and Nora L. Schmitt | May 31, 2019
This article will discuss several critical lessons that manufacturers of connected medical devices can learn from recent unprecedented coordination among the FDA, the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General and the Department of Homeland Security, respectively, as well as the increasingly important role the Federal Trade Commission has come to occupy with respect to the cybersecurity of connected medical devices.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Patrick J. Burke and Anne-Sophie Hutteau-Hiltzer | May 15, 2019
Canada's Privacy Commissioner, Daniel Therrien, recently announced his intention to obligate companies to obtain Canadians' consent before an organization engaged in commercial activities may legally transfer their personal information across the border for processing, including to the United States.
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