0 results for 'US Department of Health and Human Services'
Latest AI ChatGPT Successor GPT-4 Proffers Both Legal Promise and Legal Perils
The eagerly awaited GPT-4 has been released, considered the successor to ChatGPT, and for which legal promise is avidly showcased via applied use in legal tasks for lawyers, yet there are counterbalancing legal perils that need to be assessed as part of a judicious big picture tradeoff.Judge Gets Death Threats Over Abortion Pill Case
"No compelling governmental interest justifies the court's actions, the news media coalition objects, and urges the court to immediately docket notice of the hearing," according to SMU Dedman School of Law First Amendment Clinic.Waiting for the Air to Clear: Workplace Cannabis Policies
This article addresses ambiguities surrounding WIRE certification, procedures regarding adverse employment actions in relation to cannabis, and the potential workplace implications of appointing or contracting a WIRE.View more book results for the query "US Department of Health and Human Services"
Pacesetter Research: Workforce mobility, an opportunity beyond compliance
Professional service providers have traditionally provided compliance and regulatory services for mobility challenges, but an opportunity, specifically for law firms, to move beyond the traditional service offering may be on the horizon.'It Will Be Taken Seriously': Judge Clarifies Order in Health Care Class Action
"Where feasible, states should automatically reinstate coverage for individuals terminated after March 18, 2020 and should suspend any terminations already scheduled to occur during the emergency period," Chief U.S. District Judge Michael P. Shea said. "Coverage should be reinstated back to the date of termination."Solving the Cybercrime Collective Action Problem
Blackbeard may not be the first name that comes to mind when considering cybercrime, but prior international efforts to stop stateless rogue actors can point us toward the proper focus for cybersecurity—governments taking responsibility to solve a classic collective action problem by direct action, supporting existing industry defense measures, and leading multilateral cooperation efforts, writes Edward McNicholas, Christine Moundas and Briana Fasone.Trending Stories
Good Legal Technology is Good Business: A Case for Bringing Employment Issues In-House
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