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Features

<i>Online Extra</i>: Equifax's Liabilities Pile on After Discovery of New Compromised Data Image

<i>Online Extra</i>: Equifax's Liabilities Pile on After Discovery of New Compromised Data

Rhys Dipshan

After discovering that 2.4 million of its customers had partial driver's license information stolen, Equifax will likely face renewed questions over the handling of its post-breach internal investigation.

Features

Benchmarking Cybersecurity: CISOs and Security Leaders Share Perspectives on Managing Evolving Global Risks Image

Benchmarking Cybersecurity: CISOs and Security Leaders Share Perspectives on Managing Evolving Global Risks

Jessica Block & Ari Kaplan

30 security professionals are interviewed in a collective conversation about the cross-functional solutions they are applying to today's most complex challenges and the creative ways they are adapting to a perilous threat landscape.

Features

Law Firm Security Goes Back to School Image

Law Firm Security Goes Back to School

Nina Cunningham, Ph.D.

Armed with technical and regulatory weapons for preventing cyber crimes, law firms must administer policies to protect client data and use the systems and services held standard by industries like medicine and banking. No one knows when disruption will take place. New methods of adverse action force executives to make more choices and decisions. All departments must merge their vigilance and join with IT services as IT takes center stage in order to stay prepared.

Features

How Law Firms and Legal Departments Can Protect Against Meltdown and Spectre Image

How Law Firms and Legal Departments Can Protect Against Meltdown and Spectre

Adam Schlagman

In January, news of the Meltdown and Spectre vulnerabilities rocked the cybersecurity world. And even a few months later, the news is still reverberating, due to several patches that are significantly slowing down device and system performance. To learn more about these vulnerabilities and how law firms and legal departments can protect against them now and in in the future, I sat down with Dana Simberkoff, Chief Risk, Privacy and Information Security Officer at AvePoint.

Features

China's Cybersecurity Law Isn't Just About Cybersecurity Image

China's Cybersecurity Law Isn't Just About Cybersecurity

Rhys Dipshan

The law — which includes data localization mandates, cybersecurity best practices, and data transfer restrictions — has similarities to other cyber laws such as the EU's General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). But in this case, it's also being used to police internet content and behavior.

Features

Supreme Court Asked, Again, to Weigh In on Data Breach Standing as Circuit Split Widens Image

Supreme Court Asked, Again, to Weigh In on Data Breach Standing as Circuit Split Widens

Craig A. Newman & Jonathan Hatch

CareFirst, a large health care company involved in a data breach case, asked the U.S. Supreme Court to weigh in on whether victims can establish Article III standing to sue for the risk of future identity theft. The Court denied the request, leaving intact a recent district court holding that consumers could successfully plead such a claim issue — and leaving a split among the federal appellate courts.

Features

<i>Case Study:</i> How Mesa Systems Resolved Its Phishing Issues Image

<i>Case Study:</i> How Mesa Systems Resolved Its Phishing Issues

Steven Davidson

Phishing is a constantly changing landscape, which requires unwavering attention and focus.

Features

<i>Online Extra</i>: e-Discovery Pioneer, Judge Andrew Peck, Retires Image

<i>Online Extra</i>: e-Discovery Pioneer, Judge Andrew Peck, Retires

Ian Lopez

<b><i>One of e-Discovery's Most Influential Figures</b></i><p>After over two decades as a magistrate judge for the Southern District of New York, Peck will retire and join DLA Piper.

Features

<i>e-Discovery:</i> Four Cases Highlighting e-Discovery Trends in the Second Half of 2017 Image

<i>e-Discovery:</i> Four Cases Highlighting e-Discovery Trends in the Second Half of 2017

Mike Hamilton

In the second half of 2017, case law served to clarify what does and does not constitute reasonable policies and procedures for preserving information subject to discovery — as well as the risks you run if you fail to follow through on those policies.

Features

Use of the Blockchain to Contract Digitally Image

Use of the Blockchain to Contract Digitally

Paige M. Boshell

Smart contracts are self-executing agreements written in code on the blockchain. Parties contract digitally using distributed ledger technology. This article offers a layperson's, non-technical summary of the underlying technology and consideration of certain legal implications for smart-contracting and contract management.

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