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March 28, 2011 |

Will Lifestyle Discrimination Statutes Protect Employee Social Media Use?

Harris Beach's Karlee S. Bolaños and Kyle W. Sturgess write: A few states, including New York, have imposed statutory limitations on employers' ability to take employment actions on the basis of employees' "lawful" actions. So-called "lifestyle discrimination" statutes offer protection to certain activities that could otherwise be legitimate bases for employment decisions. They also initially seem to be a logical way to protect employees and job applicants against adverse employment actions triggered by social-media communications.
12 minute read
July 14, 2008 |

New domain names may lead to suits

Intellectual property lawyers and industry groups say a global Internet body's decision to allow more generic top-level domain names will boost cybersquatting and related arbitration and litigation.They also criticize the organization's new fees targeted at abusive temporary domain-name registrations, or so-called "domain-name tasting," as inadequate to stop cybersquatters from cashing in on short-term registrations.
4 minute read
May 13, 2013 |

Howrey Trustee Targets More Firms

3 minute read
January 24, 2013 |

Cleantech Deals Get Messy

Investors in the solar industry and clean technology in general have been skittish and the industry's been plagued by bad headline after bad headline in the past year. Lawyers acknowledge that a slowdown in cleantech deals is altering their practices. Capital is more difficult to come by for many cleantech companies, lawyers say, and more of the work within the sector is focused on restructuring and turnaround situations.
5 minute read
July 16, 2008 |

Grant v. Ratliff

4 minute read
October 11, 2011 |

Appellate Lawyer of the Week: Scott Nelson, Public Citizen

In his third Supreme Court argument in CompuCredit Corp. v. Greenwood, Public Citizen's Scott Nelson is representing consumers in a case involving an arbitration clause that could limit suits against a subprime credit card company.
6 minute read

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