Legaltech News | Analysis|Slideshow
By Michele C.S. Lange | December 18, 2017
Hundreds of in-depth judicial opinions issued in 2017 set the stage for e-discovery practices in 2018.
By Ian Anderson | December 15, 2017
The ethics of receiving payment in cryptocurrency is similar to the ethics of bartering for legal services.
By Gareth Evans, Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher and Philip Favro, Driven | December 15, 2017
The 2015 amendments had the potential to be transformative. So far, they have succeeded in part. Ambitious as they were, the amendments left unresolved several serious problems.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Kristen D. Perkins | December 14, 2017
Website accessibility lawsuits continue to increase nationwide and here in Florida. Nearly every business sector has faced such lawsuits. Florida ranks first in the number of website accessibility suits filed in federal court this year.
By David Horrigan, Relativity | December 13, 2017
Whether it's high-profile litigants such as Taylor Swift or an e-discovery sanctions case making it to the US Supreme Court, data discovery has made it to legal prime time.
By Mark Michels, Deloitte | December 7, 2017
Georgetown's “Discovery on Discovery: Both Sides of the V" panel explored whether the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure leave room for process-directed discovery.
By Hanley Chew and Eric Ball, Fenwick & West | November 30, 2017
The growing acceptance of biometric data as a form of identification for employees means that many employers will likely have to face either these or similar issues in the immediate future.
By Judy Selby, Judy Selby Consulting | November 30, 2017
The NACD's recently released Public Company Governance Survey contains both troubling and encouraging findings concerning the current state cybersecurity risk readiness.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Michael Hoenig | November 9, 2017
In his Complex Litigation column, Michael Hoenig writes: By huge advances in computer technology (hardware and software), artificial intelligence, sensors, cameras, radar, and mirrors, a car can be transformed into a platform “intelligent” enough to “self-drive” safely.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Philip M. Berkowitz | November 8, 2017
In his Employment Issues column, Philip M. Berkowitz writes: Cross-border discovery is not a new phenomenon. Nor is the conflict that exists between broad U.S. discovery principles, on the one hand, and far more limiting laws of foreign countries, on the other. The issue, though, takes on new significance with the U.S. Supreme Court's acceptance of certiorari last month in 'Microsoft v. United States', where the Second Circuit quashed a search warrant seeking production of emails located on Microsoft's digital server in Ireland.
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