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  • There can be little doubt in today's world that the Internet offers new ways to do old things. We can now work more efficiently, conduct financial business, enjoy recreational reading, socialize and perform a host of other tasks ' all online. Yet, this same Internet has provided an almost unguarded playground to allow thieves and other criminals to develop and unleash sophisticated scams and frauds on unsuspecting users.

    August 28, 2008Richard E. Peirce
  • Recent rulings of importance to your practice.

    August 28, 2008ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |
  • Online Promo Music Resales Fall under First Sale Doctrine
    Unadorned Digital Car Models in Web Ads Not 'Real' For Copyright
    Reseller Who Bought Ads with Trademark Not under First Sale Doctrine
    Subpoena Seeking ISP Subscriber Billing Data Deemed Overbroad

    August 28, 2008ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |
  • For this year's second quarter, preliminary estimated e-commerce spending was 3.3% of total estimated retail spending of $1.034 trillion. In a likely reflection of a recently slowing economy, that percentage of e-commerce of all sales was the same for the third consecutive quarter ' something that's happened only once, in 2001, when the percentage of e-commerce sales was 1.1% for the first through third quarters.

    August 28, 2008Michael Lear-Olimpi
  • Failure to follow the purpose and logic of precedent risks irrational outcomes and unjust results. These risks are apparent in recent efforts to apply a "future benefits" rule in cases alleging bad faith by commercial insurers.

    August 28, 2008ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |
  • The recent decision in Tiffany v. eBay is a well-considered exploration for finding secondary e-marketplace liability for facilitating infringing sale of goods without selling a product, and for the marketplace maker to avoid infringement liability for sellers on its site.

    August 28, 2008Roberta Jacobs-Meadway
  • Property insurance policies typically require repair and replacement of damaged property to be made with "like kind and construction" as the original. Occasionally, a policy will include another phrase that is similar to "like kind and construction," such as "like kind and quality" or "like construction and use." How to interpret such phrases, including how far an insurer must go to maintain the design and aesthetics of the pre-loss property, is an important issue in the claims process.

    August 28, 2008Jay M. Levin and Steven T. Voigt
  • No one would confuse the stereotypical IT geek with someone as cool as one-time hip-hop mogul M. C. Hammer. Yet, sometimes when the IT staff sacrifices lawyers' work habits on the altar of implementing a "litigation-hold" policy, it seems like Hammer's simple musical advice rules the day: "U Can't Touch This." From the lawyers' side of the divide, the IT department's well-intentioned effort to comply with procedural rules to enforce a litigation-hold policy often seems like interference with our professional duties to clients, and how we do our jobs.

    August 28, 2008Stanley P. Jaskiewicz
  • Now can I ship wine to out-of-state consumers? That's what people at wineries, and even retailers, have been asking e-commerce counsel since the Supreme Court decided Granholm v. Heald, which struck down wine-shipping regulations in Michigan and New York as discriminatory under the Dormant Commerce Clause. There are at least 50 answers to the question.

    August 28, 2008Cary S. Wiggins