New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Derek Dragotta | March 27, 2024
Data breaches are on the rise, as are the costs associated with them. AI is allowing bad actors to quickly shift tactics and generate more believable scams. There is a significant uptick in attempted fraudulent filings. This article presents various ways in which you can protect your organization, as well as your class, from these threats.
By Maria Dinzeo | March 22, 2024
"The thing with AI is it is such an evolving industry. There are no AI experts, and even those who call themselves experts aren't experts yet," said Anna Gorodetsky, a managing director on Major, Lindsey & Africa's in-house recruiting team.
By Riley Brennan | March 21, 2024
The court previously concluded that the state's wiretapping law, Section 165.540(1)(c) of the Oregon Revised Statutes, which bars secretly taping in-person conversations in public spaces, was unconstitutional, which effectively revived a lawsuit from Project Veritas.
Legaltech News | Analysis|Event
By Cassandre Coyer | March 21, 2024
On Tuesday, law firm Hanson Bridgett looked at some of the lingering questions the legal industry is still grappling with during a webinar.
Law.com | Conversation|Expert Opinion
By Mason Lawlor | March 20, 2024
"I really think 'McKelvey' will prove to be a landmark decision because other courts, not necessarily all of them or the majority of them, will follow it because we're in the modern world here, and courts have to be cognizant of technology and the impact on our rights," the defendant's attorney, Robert John in Fairbanks, Alaska, told Law.com.
By Isha Marathe | March 19, 2024
'Data Anonymization' is a favorite term for tech providers seeking to train their generative AI systems on user data. But data privacy professionals caution that it can be an ambiguous or inaccurate description.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Stephen M. Kramarsky and John Millson | March 18, 2024
A recent case out of the Southern District of New York involved the application of the Video Privacy Protection Act to a novel category of visual art and a method of data collection that would have been science fiction to the statute's drafters. Judge Swain's careful analysis of these issues is worth a look.
By Cassandre Coyer | March 14, 2024
The EU AI Act brings some answers around liability between providers and users, as well as what enforcement in Europe could look like post-GDPR.
By Mason Lawlor | March 14, 2024
The Alaska Supreme Court issued an opinion last week declaring the police practice of taking overhead pictures using telephoto lenses without a warrant to be an unreasonable search in violation of the Fourth Amendment's and Alaska Constitution's protections of privacy.
By Alan Friel, David Manek, Sasha Kiosse, David Farber and Colleen M. Yushchak | March 14, 2024
The assessment and audit requirements of the new generation of state data protection laws will force U.S. companies to move beyond mere window dressing and instead require them to develop fulsome data protection programs.
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