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Features

e-Commerce Docket Sheet Image

e-Commerce Docket Sheet

Julian S. Millstein, Edward A. Pisacreta & Jeffrey D. Neuburger

Recent cases in e-commerce law and in the e-commerce industry.

Features

You Won't Drink To This Image

You Won't Drink To This

Jonathan Bick

Buying wine over the Internet is legal, but selling wine on the Net has its problems and, as a result, there are few resounding cheers in the United States regarding e-sales of wine. <br>Here's how cork flecks get in the vintage: state authorities ' saying that they're protecting consumers ' exploit state regulations to thwart Internet sales of various goods and services, and wine is no exception.

Features

Cybersecurity Legal Strategies Image

Cybersecurity Legal Strategies

J.T. Westermeier

For good reason, cybersecurity has become a vital risk-management concern, and legal-based strategies, procedures and controls are essential parts of today's all-encompassing cybersecurity risk-management programs. <br>It seems a given. <br>Unfortunately, although many companies have written preparedness and cyberattack-defense plans, many have overlooked crafting the shielding armor of a well constructed legal layer. <br>And that's a big mistake waiting to happen ' again and again.

Features

Don't Let An Ex-Employee Sabotage Your Case Image

Don't Let An Ex-Employee Sabotage Your Case

Peter J. McHugh & Susan P. Mahon

With the instability in the corporate world today, employees ' both managerial and not ' are changing jobs or being laid off routinely. The employee who spends his entire career with one company is clearly now the exception, not the rule. Gone too is the concept of "loyalty up ' loyalty down." Corporations today can no longer afford to show their appreciation to long-term employees, as was the case a generation ago. In return, corporate employees do not reciprocate the same loyalty as they did in years past. This article discusses some strategies for dealing with the possibility of a hostile former employee sabotaging your otherwise valid claim or defense.

Cybervillains and How to Find Them: Obtaining the Identity of Anonymous Internet Users Image

Cybervillains and How to Find Them: Obtaining the Identity of Anonymous Internet Users

Jason H. Fisher

Many corporate executives and in-house attorneys have complained about acts done "anonymously" over the Internet and the lack of accountability for Internet users. Each has seemingly been harmed by various online conduct, such as defamation, trade libel, trade secret leakage and other acts that occur because of Internet use and abuse. Many Internet users do not realize that an experienced lawyer can actually find their identity, location, and the situs of the damaging action(s).

Features

Fulbright & Jaworski Takes Pulse of 300 Corporate Counsel for Survey of U.S. Litigation Trends Image

Fulbright & Jaworski Takes Pulse of 300 Corporate Counsel for Survey of U.S. Litigation Trends

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

What are the biggest litigation concerns right now in corporate America? What industries face the highest incidence of legal action? How do corporate law departments regard their litigation firms? And by what criteria do general counsel select the firms that litigate on their behalf, and what areas of legal service do they feel need the greatest improvement?

<i>Zubulake</i> Standard Applied in <i>U.S. v. Phillip Morris</i> Image

<i>Zubulake</i> Standard Applied in <i>U.S. v. Phillip Morris</i>

Whitney Adams

When a lawsuit looms, corporate counsel have traditionally known what to do. They issue a litigation hold, telling company employees to maintain all records related to the disputed matter. <br>Unfortunately, that's not good enough any more. Attorneys can no longer simply issue instructions and leave it up to company employees to comply. <br>Two recent federal court rulings hold companies and their counsel to a higher standard, requiring them to act aggressively and proactively in order to preserve company records. Otherwise, a company that destroys discoverable records can face harsh sanctions for spoliation.

Compensation: Is <i>Not</i> Tracking Contributions a Good Idea? Image

Compensation: Is <i>Not</i> Tracking Contributions a Good Idea?

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Joel Rose authored last month's <i>A&amp;FP</i> article on how to balance compensation for law firm partners whose strengths lay in origination, production and management. So <i>A&amp;FP</i> sought his reaction to the following thought-provoking quote from Peter C. Lando and Matthew B. Lowrie.

Features

Profitability RULES: Update on their Origin Image

Profitability RULES: Update on their Origin

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Last month's sidebar article on "profitability levers" invited ' well, predicted ' corrections to my hearsay report on the origin of the RULES acronym for profitability factors: realization, utilization, leverage, expense control, and speed of billing and collection. <br>Joseph A. Bailey of PwC, a textbook coauthor cited in that sidebar and also the coauthor of this month's feature article on globalizing law firm operations, concurs with my source's belief that Bob Arndt was one of the RULES originators.

Expanding Law Firm Operations Globally Image

Expanding Law Firm Operations Globally

Joseph A. Bailey Jr. & Gregg Sincoff

The June edition introduced numerous accounting-related issues that firms confront when they use foreign currencies. This new article raises additional accounting-related challenges of international compensation and taxation, while also highlighting the broader planning issues associated with a law firm's decision to expand its operations globally.

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