0 results for 'Cox Communications Inc'
Stolen credit cards go for $3.50 online
In mid-September, a European hacker nicknamed Poxxie broke into the computer network of a U.S. company and, he said, grabbed 1,400 credit card numbers, the account holders' names and addresses, and the security code that comes with each card.With little trouble, he sold the numbers for $3.50 each on his own site, called CVV2s.Say-On-Pay Votes Trigger Suits
Company boards who approve compensation packages against shareholder recommendations risk facing derivative actions, explains Wilson Sonsini's Jared Kopel.Cite as: Urban Justice Center v. NYDP, 400988/2010, NYLJ 1202471778135, at *1 (Sup. NY, September 1, 2010)Justice Carol Robinson EdmeadDe
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Highlights From the TGCF's 2002 Annual Conference
On Nov. 21, more than 175 guests attended the Texas General Counsel Forum's Robert H. Dedman Award for Ethics and Law Dinner at the Bent Tree Country Club in Dallas. Southern Methodist University Dedman School of Law co-hosted the event.Cal Law 25: Top Firms in the Golden State
The totals are in � we inaugurate the Cal Law 25 by ranking the biggest firms in the state, from Latham to Fenwick.Bid to Crack Nasdaq's Immunity Shield Fails
The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals will not recognize a fraud exception to the absolute immunity granted Nasdaq and other so-called self-regulatory organizations. Rejecting a lawsuit brought against Nasdaq for canceling trades in 2003, the circuit said that absolute immunity will hold as long as the self-regulatory organizations act consistently within the "quasi-governmental powers" delegated them under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and subsequent regulations.11th Circuit Obscenity Case Tests Community Standards on the Internet
The 11th Circuit on Thursday heard arguments in a case that involves some of the heaviest issues in the area of obscenity law, such as whether the government should criminalize adult films purchased over the Internet and viewed in the privacy of the home, and whether a Florida jury should apply its own mores to materials available all over the country. But the judges on the panel seemed interested less in hot-button issues than in sentencing matters and a personal problem experienced by a juror during the trial.Fallone Properties, L.L.C. v. Bethlehem Township Planning Board
Defendant-board's interpretation of its cluster ordinance as requiring a 70% set-aside of open space on a single self-contained lot and as precluding the proposed use of conservation easements on independently owned residential lots to make up a significant shortfall from the open-space requirement was reasonable and consistent with the overall goals of cluster development, the Municipal Land Use Law, and of the township zone plan, and its rejection of plaintiff's application is reinstated.A Buyer's Guide to Law Firm Software
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