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LJN Newsletters

  • Recent rulings of importance to you and your practice.

    November 01, 2004ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |
  • In the February 2003 edition of this Bulletin, I commented on the then recently issued "final" Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX) Rules on Standards of Professional Conduct for Attorneys. The "final" rules were not in fact final, because the SEC both had sought additional comments on the rules and had proposed, and sought comments on, a modified form of its controversial proposed "noisy withdrawal" rules. Since then, there has been no further word from the SEC about when and how a lawyer for a company or business executive is required or permitted to report client misconduct to a third party, including regulators and law enforcement authorities. But that does not mean all has been quiet. Significant changes have been made by the ABA to the Model Rules of Professional Conduct in this area and by international organizations wrestling with the role of lawyers in anti-money laundering compliance efforts.

    November 01, 2004Howard W. Goldstein
  • Heller Ehrman White & McAuliffe has agreed to settle a suit charging that the firm drove a now-defunct dot-com into the ground by making a first-year associate its lead attorney.

    November 01, 2004Justin Scheck
  • Recent cases of interest in the Internet industry.

    November 01, 2004ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |
  • Several months ago, U.S. District Judge Michael Mukasey of the Southern District of New York sentenced one of the most notorious "typosquatters," John Zuccarini, to two and a half years for violating the Truth in Domain Names Act, which was enacted by Congress last year.
    Although his arrest and conviction remain the most significant actions taken under the statute, the Domain Names Act adds another possible step that can assist companies that are victimized by typosquatting on the Internet.

    November 01, 2004Shari Claire Lewis
  • Recent developments of note in the Internet industry.
    This month:
    First Suit Filed Against Internet 'Spyware'
    House Passes Second Anti-Spyware Bill
    Grokster Officals Settle Separate Copyright Case
    AOL Files First 'Spim' Suit
    RIAA Sues 750 More
    U.S. Teen Soccer Prodigy Adu Wins Cybersquatter Case
    U.S. Declares War on Intellectual Property Theft

    November 01, 2004Samuel Fineman, Esq.
  • We've covered the CAN SPAM Act fairly extensively from a "what is it" type of perspective. In this article, Board of Editors member Jonathan Bick provides some practical advice on how to advise those clients who want to send marketing e-mails lawfully (it just doesn't seem right to say "spam lawfully.

    November 01, 2004Jonathan Bick
  • The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit held that a New York-based plaintiff properly filed suit in Manhattan federal court alleging unjust enrichment and misappropriation of idea by the British Broadcasting Corp. (BBC). Gross v. British Broadcasting Corp. Plaintiff Pat Gross claimed that the BBC had without permission used her idea for a documentary about militant animal-rights activists that was broadcast in the United Kingdom. The district court dismissed the complaint for forum non conveniens.

    November 01, 2004ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |
  • As a companion to his feature article on online content aggregators, Chris Castle discusses some of the new hardware that is available for downloading and playing online music ' and its possible effect on online music subscription rates.

    November 01, 2004Christian Castle
  • Recent developments in entertainment law.

    November 01, 2004Stan Soocher