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28. Generational Communication Issues Help Biz Dev, Hurt Talent Retention
Generation Gap Part 2: Complete Comms + Talent Wars Many managing partners don't understand what their kids are saying to each other, far less their grandchildren. The same gap can exist between law firm leadership and junior associates. Yet, the communication gap is bridgeable.Litigator of the Week Runners-Up and Shout Outs
Runners-up this week include litigators at Cooley, Kramer Levin and Varnum.Think Gen AI Is Mind-Blowing Today? Next Decade's Advancements Will Be 'Momentous'
In a CLOC Global Institute keynote, Suffolk University Law School Dean Andrew Perlman said, "I believe it is going to be the most significant technology ever created for the legal industry and many others."High Billing Rates May Hasten New Era of Productivity
"The way the market is structured and has been structured for a long time, it's not really a question of growing productivity, it's how do we mitigate the contraction of productivity?" said Bill Josten, strategic content manager for Thomson Reuters.View more book results for the query "*"
Judicial Ethics Opinion 23-116
A judicial association may enter into a licensing agreement with a vendor to create and sell themed products to association members, provided such agreement is non-transferable, and the association prohibits the vendor from using the association's name in any advertising or listing the association as a customer/client.How Can Countries Prepare to Defend Against Deepfakes—and 'Cheapfakes'—This Election Cycle?
Some experts believe that most countries—including the U.S.—are not ready for the wave of synthetic content that's to come.Split Appeals Court Applies Ministerial Exception in Gay Teacher's Bias Case
"I think that the Fourth Circuit is kind of following the Supreme Court in broadening the ministerial exception," said attorney Amy Epstein Gluck. "I think we're going to see more leeway for religion."After Jury Returns $45M Verdict Against Johnson & Johnson, Dean Omar Opens New Talc Trial in Oregon
Dean Omar, the Dallas-based plaintiffs firm that won a $45 million talcum powder verdict last month against Johnson & Johnson, opened on Thursday with another trial. Orrick's Will Stute represented Johnson & Johnson.