By ALM Staff | June 8, 2021
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.
By Victoria Hudgins | June 4, 2021
Employers may have lost one legal mechanism for enforcing employee computer usage, but lawyers note Thursday's U.S. Supreme Court decision doesn't erase all remedies.
By Alaina Lancaster | June 3, 2021
A group of McDonald's customers claim that the food service chain's drive-thru technology violates Illinois' biometric privacy law. If they can prove that the company is using voice recognition to identify repeat customers, some privacy attorneys say the case could make new law.
By Doug Meal, Michelle Visser, David Cohen and Chris Richart | May 12, 2021
As was anticipated when it was first enacted, the CCPA has resulted in a significant number of class action litigations. This article assesses the litigation to date and provides key practical takeaways for how businesses faced with such actions can seek early dismissal.
By Frank Ready | April 30, 2021
As the cyber risk that businesses face continues to expand, data processing vendors may find themselves in more protracted negotiations over who will absorb the bulk of the liability.
By Alaina Lancaster | April 28, 2021
Attorneys from Lieff Cabraser Heimann & Bernstein assert that dozens of third parties might have access to personally identifiable data from Google and Apple's COVID-19 contact tracing system.
By Ellen Bardash | April 19, 2021
The settlement, if approved, would address millions of reported violations of Illinois' Biometric Information Privacy Act in multidistrict litigation consolidated in the Northern District of Illinois.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Shari Claire Lewis | April 19, 2021
In this edition of her Internet Issues/Social Media column, Shari Claire Lewis briefly describes the state of Communications Decency Act §230 in the Second Circuit, focusing on §230(c)(1), and explores the court's recent decision in 'Domen v. Vimeo', a rare decision involving CDA §230(c)(2), and its implications.
By Dan Packel | April 13, 2021
"There's absolutely no shortage of work," said Squire Patton Boggs' Alan Friel in Los Angeles. "There's more a shortage of people who know what they're doing."
By Rhys Dipshan | April 13, 2021
Speaking at the Legalweek(year) keynote, Peter Winn, the DOJ's acting chief privacy and civil liberties officer, argued that individual control over data isn't the best approach, and that EU concerns over U.S. national security data practices are uninformed.
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