Product Review: Keep Your Metadata Out-of-Sight'
'Metadata' ' 1. Confidential information that ends up being electronically distributed thereby causing embarrassment and allowing your law firm to be placed at great risk in the hands of any and all outsiders to your firm! Now I realize that I may not be Webster when it comes to defining words, but I think that this really is the definition of the word Metadata!
How to Deconstruct the Spawn of Satan
My client finally got deposed ' and then some. I thought I had explained the deposition process well: I pointed out what a deposition was, how it worked, who would be there; I told my client to tell the truth, and not to answer questions that she didn't understand. I explained what objections I could make, and so forth. Well, I left out a little something that my client promptly pointed out after her deposition was taken '
Using Vision' Court Rules To Streamline Docket Control
My firm, Shartsis, Friese & Ginsburg LLP (SFG), San Francisco, is a mid-size law firm that specializes in litigation, real estate, business transactions and other commercial areas of law. Prior to 1999, before I began working here, our firm used a calendar system that required manual calculation and research of court rules and statutes, which was extremely time consuming.
Features
Courtroom Technology: The Courthouse Spec's May Be Just A Click Away
In the past several years, new technology, including video evidence presentation systems, video conferencing and electronic transcription systems, have been installed in federal and state courts across the nation. Courtrooms today vary a great deal not only in size and layout, but especially with regard to the types of technology made available. All of these factors significantly affect the presentation strategy a lawyer will use during a trial. When brainstorming presentation strategy, courtroom presenters consider the most subtle factors including, the amount of ambient light, the distance and line of sight between counsel and trier of fact and the location of monitors and screens. Most lawyers agree that it is a great advantage to argue a case in a familiar setting; something as trivial as showing a witness where he or she will sit in the courtroom prior to trial can be important.
DOT.COMments
You're right ' it can't possibly be tax time again, and yet ' here we are, wondering if each Easter egg constitutes a taxable capital gain. Tax time brings special problems for taxpayers affected by divorce. Should your clients file separately or jointly? Which spouse gets to claim the exemptions for the children?
Features
Pre-Nups and ERISA
Take a second look at your prenuptial agreements. Do they adequately protect retirement accounts from the reaches of ERISA? Chances are they do not. ERISA has specific requirements to effectuate a spousal waiver of rights to a participant's retirement benefits.
New Regulation Helps Plan Stock Redemptions
The U.S. Treasury Department has promulgated a final tax regulation intended to remove the uncertainty surrounding the tax treatment of stock redemptions that resulted from recent case law. Treasury Decision 9035, 68 Fed. Reg. 1534 (Jan. 10). The final regulation adopts and expands upon the proposed regulations that were issued by the Department in August 2001.
Features
Working Well with Custody Experts
When attorneys ask mental health experts' opinions, the experience is often frustrating, and the experts are less helpful than the attorneys had hoped. In an earlier article, we outlined the qualification and background of mental health experts. In this follow-up, we explore some problems that arise between experts and attorneys ' and offer some solutions.
Need Help?
- Prefer an IP authenticated environment? Request a transition or call 800-756-8993.
- Need other assistance? email Customer Service or call 1-877-256-2472.
MOST POPULAR STORIES
- 'Insurable Interest' and the Scope of First-Party CoverageThis article reviews the fundamental underpinnings of the concept of insurable interest, and certain recent cases that have grappled with the scope of insurable interest and have articulated a more meaningful application of the concept to claims under first-party property policies.Read More ›
- The Flight to Quality and Workplace ExperienceThat the pace of change is "accelerating" is surely an understatement. What seemed almost a near certainty a year ago — that law firms would fully and permanently embrace work-from-home — is experiencing a seeming reversal. While many firms have, in fact, embraced hybrid operations, the meaning of hybrid has evolved from "office optional," to an average required 2 days a week, to now many firms coming out with four-day work week mandates — this time, with teeth.Read More ›
- Beach Boys Songs Written Decades Ago Triggered Current Quarrel With LawyersThere's current litigation in the ongoing Beach Boys litigation saga. A lawsuit filed in 2019 against Nevada residents Mike Love and his wife Jacquelyne in the U.S. District Court for the District of Nevada that alleges inaccurate payment by the Loves under the retainer agreement and seeks $84.5 million in damages.Read More ›
- Supreme Court Rules Rejection of Trademark License Does Not Rescind Rights of LicenseeMission Product Holdings, Inc. v. Tempnology, LLC The question is whether a debtor's rejection of its agreement granting a license "terminates rights of the licensee that would survive the licensor's breach under applicable nonbankruptcy law."Read More ›
- A Look Behind, A Look Ahead: Part Two - E-DiscoveryPart Two of a Two-Part Article Cybersecurity Law & Strategy partnered with our ALM sibling Legaltech News to ask cybersecurity and e-discovery experts what they thought the key trends of 2019 and what they expect to see in 2020. Part Two looks at e-discovery.Read More ›