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May 24, 2023 | New York Law Journal

Madison Square Garden Entertainment Accuses State Liquor Authority of Colluding With Attorneys

The SLA lodged administrative charges against MSGE in March, saying the company's ban on lawyers engaged in litigation against any MSGE-owned entity violated the terms of their liquor license.
6 minute read
February 24, 2023 | Law.com

2.61 Gigabyte Difference: Inability to Restore Spoliated Electronic Evidence Dooms Wrongful Termination Lawsuit

Liberty claimed that Lamb's Evernote software data, physical data, iPhone, data, and metadata that existed was not produced through discovery.
7 minute read
May 25, 2018 | The Legal Intelligencer

Could Your Social Media Posts Be Used Against You in Court? 

The Pennsylvania Superior Court decided an issue of first impression in Pennsylvania—what is the standard for the authentication of social media postings at trial.
5 minute read
July 10, 2017 | Legaltech News

Are Your Post-Breach Forensic Reports Privileged?

The Central District of California recently joined the courts that have held forensic reports created by outside security companies following a data breach are protected from disclosure in civil litigation in some cases.
29 minute read
April 18, 2016 |

EDI Launches Distance Learning Program as New E-Discovery Education Initiative

The web-based program features judges, corporate counsel, law firm experts as lecturers and costs $1.
4 minute read
July 13, 2015 |

Scope of Section 220 Discovery After 'Wal-Mart'

Michael C. Hefter, Ryan M. Philp and Kate E. Olivieri of Bracewell & Giuliani discuss the decision in 'Wal-Mart Stores Inc. v. Indiana Electrical Workers Pension Trust Fund IBEW' and state that the early signs are that 'Wal-Mart' may not have signaled a sea change in the scope of §220 discovery.
15 minute read
October 07, 2014 |

Microsoft Paves the Way for Data Privacy Battle

In their Federal E-Discovery column, H. Christopher Boehning and Daniel J. Toal of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison write: Microsoft Corporation has found itself at the center of an intense legal battle regarding the ability of the United States government to subpoena data stored abroad. In addition to drawing the attention of constitutional law scholars, technology companies, and lawmakers, the case has also implicated some emerging areas of e-discovery practice.
12 minute read

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