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Features

<b><i>Leadership:</i></b> Growing Thick Skin Image

<b><i>Leadership:</i></b> Growing Thick Skin

Mark Beese

Having thick skin is critical to success in law firms, especially when your job centers on developing programs that help a firm compete in a dynamic and increasingly competitive environment.

Features

Ninth Circuit Insulates Corporate Insider from Preference Liability Image

Ninth Circuit Insulates Corporate Insider from Preference Liability

Michael L. Cook

"A corporate insider who personally guaranteed" the debtor's loan was not liable on a bankruptcy trustee's preference claim when the corporate debtor repaid its lender, held the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit on May 6, 2015. This article analyzes the ruling.

<b><i>Media & Communications:</i></b> Lawyers: Stop Hatin' on Marketing Image

<b><i>Media & Communications:</i></b> Lawyers: Stop Hatin' on Marketing

Dan Lear

Most lawyers don't like or understand marketing. This distaste is understandable. Bad marketing is both unnerving and potentially professionally unethical. But another reason lawyers don't like it that that they think it has no use other than to try to convince people to part with their money. This idea completely false. And it needs to be

Features

Postscript on Equitable Mootness Image

Postscript on Equitable Mootness

Michael L. Cook

Last month, the Third Circuit handed down another important equitable mootness decision, <I>In re Tribune Media Co.</I> This article discusses the ruling.

Features

Social Security Benefits in Divorce Cases Image

Social Security Benefits in Divorce Cases

Paul L. Feinstein

One of the most important family law issues that vary from state to state is the question of whether Social Security benefits should be considered or offset when making property determinations. There is quite a bit of law on the subject and a thorough review of your own state's applicable law is required.

Regulatory Investigations Following a Reported Data Breach Image

Regulatory Investigations Following a Reported Data Breach

Theodore J. Kobus III

In BakerHostetler's inaugural Data Security Incident Response Report, we found that regulators inquired about a company's breach 31% of the time and multi-state state Attorneys General investigations were launched less than 5% of the time. A post-breach investigation is not guaranteed. Certainly, in large, highly public incidents, companies can expect at least an inquiry if not a full-blown investigation.

Features

How Consumers Are Shoplifting from the Comfort of Their Own Homes Image

How Consumers Are Shoplifting from the Comfort of Their Own Homes

Monica Eaton-Cardone

Online retail has completely transformed the way the world goes shopping. It is projected that consumers worldwide will spend nearly $1,700 billion in online sales this year. Consumers are leaving the physical swiping of cards and exchange of cash behind for the ease and convenience of a card-not-present transaction. But more important than the effect on brick-and-mortar, this paradigm shift is reshaping the way consumers think.

Features

Upsetting the Apple Cart? Image

Upsetting the Apple Cart?

Martin J. Foncello

Observers of federal compliance monitors are accustomed to seeing them appointed after negotiation, commonly by deferred prosecution agreements (DPAs) in criminal matters or by consent decrees in civil matters. The monitorship in the Apple e-books antitrust case is a notable exception. This article discusses the proceedings.

How Effective Has VARA Been? Image

How Effective Has VARA Been?

Miriam DeChant

The Visual Artists Rights Act of 1990 (VARA) was enacted as an amendment to copyright law for the United States to really get on board with the Berne Convention. Finally, hardworking American authors of original works of fine art would be granted a few "moral rights." That was the promise. But where are we, 25 years in? What artists are granted these rights, and what stands in the way of exercising them?

Features

The Uniform Premarital and Marital Agreements Act Image

The Uniform Premarital and Marital Agreements Act

Matthew A. Feigin

This article will compare key provisions of the UPAA, the UPMAA, and the law of New York, the largest state that has not adopted either uniform act. The differences are detailed in a chart in Part Three of this article.

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