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SEC Chief Gensler Warns of 'AI Washing' and Potential Conflicts of Interest
"If you're putting the robo adviser's interest ahead of the broker dealer's interest ahead of the investor, therein lies a conflict" Gary Gensler said.The Compensation Puzzle: An Added Piece Is 'Compensation Culture'
There's one piece that may be the most critical to ensuring you are walking into a compensation negotiation from a position of strength: Have a grasp of a company's compensation philosophy, otherwise known as their "compensation culture." Compensation culture will dictate salary ranges, the negotiation and everything in between.Two CPLR Devices Worth Remembering
This month, Katryna Kristoferson and David Horowitz visit two lesser-known and used CPLR devices: the summons with notice and a motion for pre-action disclosure. This column is joined by Justice Barbara Jaffe (Ret.), who writes on the summons with notice, including an interesting experience she encountered with the device while on the bench. Katryna then takes the laboring oar and writes on pre-action disclosure.How COVID Redefined PR and Branding Campaigns
Over the last three and a half years, rapid changes to how customers interact and how businesses promote themselves have been paramount. COVID changed it all. Yes, there were—and are—other societal factors in play, but what may become known as "the COVID era" upended the entire PR and branding landscape.When Do Omissions Create Private Liability? The Supreme Court Ponders
On Jan. 16, 2024, the Supreme Court heard 'MacQuarie Infrastructure Corp. v. Moab Partners L.P.', which will presumably resolve a circuit split. The question before the court is whether the Second Circuit erred in holding "that a failure to make a disclosure required under Item 303 of SEC Regulation S-K can support a private claim under §10(b) of the Exchange Act, even in the absence of an otherwise misleading statement."View more book results for the query "*"
Tax Return Confidentiality: Recent Developments
Over the past year, federal courts have issued decisions clarifying the extent to which §6103 shields tax returns and return information from disclosure in civil litigation, the extent to which the IRS is permitted to disclose confidential information during and in connection with investigations, and the application of a safe harbor shielding the government from liability for unauthorized disclosures.Decision of the Day: Challenge to New York's Assault Weapons Ban Survives Motion to Dismiss
This ruling was selected and summarized by the New York Law Journal's decision editors.Is RPAPL §1301 Really an Impediment to Pursuing a Guaranty Claim?
Scott Weinberg and Joel Haims discuss New York's "Election of Remedies" statute, examining whether it really has a material impact in practice.NRA Hid Improper Spending by Billing Third Party: Ex-CFO
Under questioning at trial by Senior Litigation Counsel Monica Connell of the New York Attorney General's office, Wilson "Woody" Phillips said the system was set up to conceal information from prying employees.Joe Tacopina Withdraws From Representation of Donald Trump
The Manhattan trial—which concerns allegations of falsifying business records to conceal hush-money payments during the 2016 election—could kick off as early as March.Your Long-Term Care Legislation Playbook
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Revenue, Profit, Cash: Managing Law Firms for Success
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Candid Conversations: Couples, Money & Conflict
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7 Proven Strategies for Implementing a Workers' Comp Cloud Platform
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