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A Tool Every Cross-Border Litigant Should Know About, and a Word of Caution
Tim Harkness, Linda H. Martin, David Y. Livshiz and Allie Wilson write: As cross-border business transactions become the norm, rather than the exception, it is unsurprising that incidents of cross-border litigation are also on the rise. Lawyers representing clients in these complicated games of “three-dimensional chess” are therefore required to understand substantive and procedural nuances of each forum in order to obtain the best results for their clients.Cheating the Algorithm: The New 'Pump and Dump' Fraud
In his Corporate Securities column, John C. Coffee Jr. writes: Old frauds never die. Nor do they fade away. Rather, they mutate and morph into new configurations in response to new opportunities (which new technologies usually create). Thus, the traditional boiler room "pump and dump" scheme was a product of the widespread adoption of the telephone, which allowed high pressure salesman to reach hundreds of gullible customers in a day. Today, an analogous new technological development is inviting new forms of fraud.The EU Just Fined Google $2.7 Billion. What Happens Next?
The decision by the European Commission will force the company to change the way it displays some search results, but also marks the opening of what is likely to be a long court battle and more civil litigation against the tech giant.Purolite Corp. v. Hitachi America, Ltd.
Firm Qualifies for 28 USC §1782 Discovery But Its Subpoenas Cannot Be ApprovedView more book results for the query "Advanced Micro Devices"
International Law for Solo Practitioners and Small Firms
Many solo and "small firm" practitioners whose practice is predominantly county or state-centered may believe that "international law" has no relevance to what they do. This results in part from a preconception as to what international law entails.Relationship management in a disruptive business environment
How new client relationship management systems can help law firms revitalise their businessU.S. Discovery in Aid of Foreign Arbitration Proceedings
Joshua D. Rievman, of Hoguet Newman Regal & Kenney, writes that participants in arbitration proceedings held abroad may seek an order in a U.S. court to obtain documents and testimony in the United States for use in that arbitration, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §1782. Most U.S. courts approve of assistance to participants in arbitrations conducted pursuant to rules agreed to among member states, such as UNCITRAL or NAFTA. When the foreign arbitration proceeding is purely private, however, the result is less clear. Several federal district courts have granted Section 1782 discovery applications for such private arbitrations, while a narrow minority of courts have denied them. The application of Section 1782 and the circumstances under which requests for assistance with private arbitrations are granted remain in flux.Corporate Transparency Act Resource Kit
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Revenue, Profit, Cash: Managing Law Firms for Success
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Law Firm Operational Considerations for the Corporate Transparency Act
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