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LJN Newsletters

  • Recently filed cases in entertainment law, straight from the steps of the Los Angeles Superior Court.

    November 01, 2004ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |
  • Recent cases in entertainment law.

    November 01, 2004ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |
  • Depending on the circumstances and the law, parties on either side of an entertainment suit may ask a court for an award of attorney fees. Following are recent court rulings that deal with this and related concerns.

    November 01, 2004ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |
  • National rulings of importance to you and your practice.

    November 01, 2004ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |
  • Anti-harassment and diversity training can be a very effective tool in preventing claims of workplace discrimination and minimizing risk. It is essential, however, to be aware of the snares along the way: poorly executed training may be as good as no training at all, or worse. Properly executed, anti-harassment and diversity training holds out some hope for employers as a means to avoid the adage, all too familiar in the human resource community, that "no good deed goes unpunished."

    November 01, 2004Rachelle Berlin Weathersby
  • E-mail has become a way of life. Its advantages in the business world are widely known: It is an inexpensive, easily distributed medium, which can be accessed, even wirelessly, almost instantaneously anywhere in the world. In this fast-paced global economy, these features are highly desired. E-mail in the workplace is a double-edged sword, however, and the problems associated with workplace e-mail, particularly in connection with litigation-related discovery, have been recognized with increasing frequency by courts and litigants around the country.

    November 01, 2004Albert J. Solecki, Jr. and Melissa G. Rosenberg
  • As set forth in a prior article appearing in the April issue of the Internet Law & Strategy newsletter, despite some suggestions to the contrary, the rise of the Internet as a business tool does not portend the end of limits on personal jurisdiction. Rather, the courts are continuing to find that the Internet merely provides another vehicle (albeit an electronic one) through which a party may purposely avail itself of the privilege of conducting business in a foreign state and thus subject itself to jurisdiction in that state.

    October 31, 2004Benjamin I. Fink and Steven A. Wagner
  • Few Internet law issues create a greater challenge than Internet jurisdiction, which raises the fundamental question of whose law applies to activity that takes place online. While some experts initially hoped that the Internet might breed a new era of global legal harmonization, a closer examination reveals that legal differences are cropping up everywhere as countries become more assertive in ensuring that their Internet legal framework is consistent with national policy priorities.

    October 31, 2004Michael Geist
  • Despite the temptation, there's no need to put on a Don King wig when reading this story (notice I avoided saying "don" a Don King wig ' I just couldn't do it). In The Supreme Court of Judicature Court of Appeal sitting in London, the court upheld the ruling of a lower court that a libel suit against world-renowned boxing promoter Don King based on statements published on several Web sites remain to be heard in England, rather than be moved to the U.S.

    October 31, 2004Steven Salkin