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Features

Data Privacy Forecast: 2021 On Pace to Be a Milestone Year Image

Data Privacy Forecast: 2021 On Pace to Be a Milestone Year

Jake Frazier

As the economy and business operations begin to stabilize in the new year, organizations will take stock of lessons learned and new risks that need to be addressed. In-house legal and information governance teams are likely to be at the forefront of these efforts, with a keen focus on the data privacy, security and compliance gaps that were exposed during the pandemic.

Features

E-discovery 2020 Year In Review — And A Look Into 2021 Image

E-discovery 2020 Year In Review — And A Look Into 2021

Steve Salkin

The e-discovery issues associated with so many people working from home due to COVID-19, data collection privacy and more market consolidation are just some of the factors that respondents say will factor in to how law firms need to prepare for 2021.

Features

Coding Bias Out of the Law Image

Coding Bias Out of the Law

Abeer Abu Judeh

One of legal technology's best success story is how quickly and ably most law firms were able to make the transition. However, for some, remote appearances pose new challenges such as effective access to counsel, signal interruptions, authentication and privacy.

Features

Why Analytics Can Be Risky in the Wrong Hands Image

Why Analytics Can Be Risky in the Wrong Hands

Barry Schwartz

Having the most expensive or advanced tool in the toolbox doesn't matter if you don't know how to use it, and if you're not using those tools properly, there are risks everywhere.

Features

Legal Issues and Monetization Strategies In a Quarantine-Streaming Music World, Part Two Image

Legal Issues and Monetization Strategies In a Quarantine-Streaming Music World, Part Two

Gwendolyn Seale

Part Two of a two-part article While the livestreaming of music performances is not an entirely new phenomenon, the COVID crisis has transformed the live performance landscape, compelling artists from around the world to reach their fanbase by producing "quarantine streams," in which they livestream their sets on social media platforms. Given this sudden pivot to livestreaming over social media, unsurprisingly many questions have arisen.

Features

Automated License Plate Recognition and Privacy Image

Automated License Plate Recognition and Privacy

David Horrigan

Just what is automated license plate recognition technology, and do you really have a reasonable expectation of privacy in a number emblazoned on the front of your Ford or the back of your Buick?

Features

Can Terms of Service Agreements Allow Companies to Skirt Consumer Protection Laws? Image

Can Terms of Service Agreements Allow Companies to Skirt Consumer Protection Laws?

Stephen M. Kramarsky

Most users do not have the time or inclination to read through dozens of pages of legalese before reviewing the morning's tweets, and if millions of users are agreeing to these terms, how bad can they be?

Features

ROSS Intelligence Claims Thomson Reuters Uses 'Tying Scheme' to Thwart Westlaw Competition Image

ROSS Intelligence Claims Thomson Reuters Uses 'Tying Scheme' to Thwart Westlaw Competition

Alaina Lancaster

ROSS Intelligence is alleging that Thomson Reuters uses anticompetitive behavior to maintain Westlaw's dominance in the legal research space, according to a complaint filed in late January.

Features

Open Space and the Conundrum of High Stakes Zoning Disputes Image

Open Space and the Conundrum of High Stakes Zoning Disputes

Philip E. Karmel, James P. Colgate & Judith M. Gallent

The New York Court of Appeals' recent decision in Peyton v. BSA held, in the context of a zoning lot containing several residential buildings, that the Zoning Resolution of the City of New York does not require an area to be accessible to all residents of the zoning lot for the area to qualify as "open space."

Features

NY Court of Appeals Rules on Damages Clauses In Commercial Leases Image

NY Court of Appeals Rules on Damages Clauses In Commercial Leases

Linton Mann III & William T. Russell Jr.

In The Trustees of Columbia University in the City of New York v. D'Agostino Supermarkets, the NY Court of Appeals split on the issue of whether the relevant damages clause in a commercial lease was unenforceable as a matter of law because it was so grossly disproportionate to the ascertainable amount due upon full performance.

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