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Data rights of individuals and corporations as pertains to international law. A major focus here is GDPR, as was EU Privacy Shield. Also look at technologies both enhancing and compromising privacy
By David Ruiz | May 31, 2017
Dawn Smith, former top lawyer at VMware Inc., has left the company to become executive vice president, chief legal officer at computer security company McAfee LLC, according to Smith's LinkedIn profile.
1 minute read
By Zach Warren | May 25, 2017
Former healthcare GC Randy Peak, now at Perkins Coie, talks cybersecurity concerns in healthcare, data sharing among physicians, and what to ask vendors about data rights.
1 minute read
By Cogan Schneier | May 24, 2017
A Maryland district court dismissed the case in 2015, agreeing with the government's position that the plaintiffs lacked standing.
1 minute read
By Cogan Schneier | May 23, 2017
The ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit allows Wikimedia to argue the merits of its case against the NSA in a public courtroom.
1 minute read
By P.J. D'Annunzio | May 23, 2017
California will receive more than $1.4 million from the settlement, the largest share of any state.
1 minute read
By Amanda Bronstad | May 22, 2017
An app that allows riders to report incidents on the transit system is also collecting a trove of data on its users' whereabouts, according to a new suit from Edelson PC.
1 minute read
By Amanda Bronstad | May 18, 2017
U.S. District Judge Paul Magnuson reconsidered issues related to class certification at the direction of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit but reached the same conclusion.
1 minute read
By Rhys Dipshan | May 18, 2017
A lack of dialogue between IT and the legal department is at the core of shadow IT and many other data security challenges.
1 minute read
By Cheryl Miller | May 11, 2017
The San Francisco city attorney on Thursday sued Uber Technologies Inc. over access to records about the ride-hailing company's drivers, escalating a conflict that the company said raises privacy issues.
1 minute read
By C. Ryan Barber | May 11, 2017
Months after Apple faced off with the FBI over an order to unlock an iPhone connected to the San Bernardino shooting investigation, Amazon.com Inc. was thrust center-stage in its own digital privacy debate when Arkansas prosecutors demanded data from a murder suspect's Echo device. Amazon initially objected to the demands last year, only to later grant access after the suspect consented to the release of the data. Speaking Thursday at a Consumer Federation of America conference in Washington, an in-house lawyer at Amazon stated flatly: "No, Echo is not spying on you."
1 minute read
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Description: Fox Rothschild LLP has an opening in the San Francisco, CA office for an associate in our Labor & Employment Department. Th...
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Professional Announcement
Frederick D. Miceli has joined the firm as Of Counsel
Professional Announcement