0 results for 'US Department of Health and Human Services'
Atlanta's 11th Circuit Rules Organ Network Can't Keep 'Embarrassing' Internal Emails Sealed
Judge Amy Totenberg of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia previously characterized the emails as containing "inadvisable 'hot takes,'" "inflammatory remarks," and "clear preferences for policy outcomes."Eleventh Circuit: United Network for Organ Sharing Can't Keep 'Embarrassing' Internal Emails Sealed
Judge Amy Totenberg of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia previously characterized the emails as containing "inadvisable 'hot takes,'" "inflammatory remarks," and "clear preferences for policy outcomes."How to Address Evolving Privacy Regulations During Discovery
For all the coverage that privacy regulations are meant to provide, there is precious little guidance about how to protect private information, and there is very little legal precedent to guide our practices.A Recipe for Discovery Success: Treat Private Data With the Same Priority Given to Privilege
What is an investigator, attorney, or other discovery professional to do when private information requires protection today, during a current litigation or investigation happening now, in the absence of clear guidance?IT in Pandemic Times: The Impossible Becomes the Inevitable
Prior to the pandemic, there was a familiar theme with regard to e-discovery. Clients and their law firms producing e-discovery would fail in some way—take too long, miss important documents, and so on—and would respond to motions and criticism generally with the claim that they cannot do what is being demanded of them.View more book results for the query "US Department of Health and Human Services"
People First, Tech Forward: E-Discovery in 2021
Following a turbulent 2020, here's how attorneys and the legal industry are incorporating lessons learned last year into their work, and how our Perkins Coie columnists anticipate these themes may appear in e-discovery.How Did Your E-Discovery Fare During COVID Lockdown?
As seen recently with the COVID crisis, e-discovery has been overlooked in business continuity planning. This is a mistake, as corporations have a duty to preserve ESI relating to litigation and regulatory inquiries, and legal deadlines to meet.Coronavirus and E-Discovery: How COVID-19 is Testing Business Continuity for Service Providers
Keeping our people safe from a global pandemic without interrupting service delivery is not an easy task. However, there are actionable solutions that can be put in place to enhance your business continuity and disaster recovery plan.From Wearables to Implantables: New Frontiers in the E-Discovery Landscape
Samuel Abate Jr., Jason Lichter and Michael Vives write: Technology will always move faster than the law, but pharmaceutical and medical device counsel must remain cognizant of how mobile health applications and accompanying sensor-laden devices could, with proper planning and foresight, open new avenues for pursuing their claims and defenses.Experts Fret Cyber Risk to Electronic Health Records
A cybersecurity framework for medical devices and health-care technology needs to be developed in a partnership between the government, manufacturers and health-care providers, officials from across the public and private sectors during a workshop con-vened by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.Law Firm Operational Considerations for the Corporate Transparency Act
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Practical Guidance Journal: Protecting Work Product in a Generative AI World
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Countdown to Compliance: SEC Private Fund Reforms
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