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Sensory Designed Hospitality: Enhancing Workplace Experience Through the Five Senses
As more organizations obtain employee feedback regarding their in-office experience strategy, we are seeing the effectiveness that indulging the five-senses has on office occupancy, return-to-office, and the overall productivity of employees.People in the News—May 3, 2024—McNees, Saxton & Stump
McNees Wallace & Nurick has announced that attorney and industry leader Amy Capobianco Marsar has been tapped to head the firm's automotive dealership law group, a team of 21 attorneys collaborating to serve clients.Litigation Landslide: The Rise, Chaos and Future of Privacy Litigation
This article explores the cause of the rapid increase in privacy litigation, the challenges these cases bring and what the future may hold.Security Risks Surrounding Generative Artificial Intelligence
Given the lack of clarity of how GenAI operates and the likelihood that further risks will emerge as usage becomes more widespread, it is imperative that attorneys and their clients adopt proactive measures to safeguard against the inherent risks presented by these technologies.Practical Prescriptions for Incident Response and Preparedness in Health Care
This article provides an overview of the health care sector's growing cybersecurity risks, best practices for helping prevent or mitigate cyberattacks and best practices for responding to incidents and mitigating health care organizations' risk of enforcement actions and litigation.E-Discovery Startup Fileread Hires Former AstraZeneca Head of Legal Services Josh Kreamer as GC
The hire comes less than a year after Fileread closed on a $6 million funding round led by an investment firm backed by Google.'Indefensible & Inexcusable': Ex-Judge Luttig on Role of Lawyers in Lead Up to Jan. 6
"I doubt that January 6 would have ever occurred had it not been for the enabling of that effort by lawyers of the legal profession," said Michael Luttig, formerly of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit.Attorney Not Disqualified; Placement of Names on Witness List Not Obstruction of Justice
Appellant appealed the trial court's judgment of sentence entered on his jury trial conviction of receiving stolen property and driving on a suspended license. The court affirmed, holding that the trial court did not err in admitting into evidence screenshots taken from appellant's Facebook account, which appellant utilized to offer stolen items for sale, where the digital evidence was amply authenticated by law enforcement testimony, victim testimony, and account records procured from Facebook's parent corporation.
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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The Ultimate Guide to Remote Legal Work
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