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Cross-Border Cybercrime and the Cybersecurity Wars Image

Cross-Border Cybercrime and the Cybersecurity Wars

Sue Reisinger

The Home Depot data breach may be the largest in the U.S. yet, affecting not only millions of customers in the U.S., but also shoppers at its 180 stores in Canada. Home Depot said customers who shopped at its U.S. and Canadian stores as far back as April were exposed, meaning the breach extended for more than four months including the busy summer season.

Features

Collecting Social Security Numbers Image

Collecting Social Security Numbers

Nicole Pszczolkowski & L. Elise Dieterich

In the first half of 2014, at least 96 significant data breaches were reported, compromising more than 2.2 million records. Of these breaches, at least 46 involved records that may have contained Social Security Numbers (SSNs). What the affected businesses may not know is that the mere collection of SSNs may have put them in violation of state laws, in addition to the liability they may now face for having failed to protect the SSN information.

Features

<i>Jancik v. Redbox Automated Retail</i> Image

<i>Jancik v. Redbox Automated Retail</i>

Robert A. Naeve

Congress enacted the ADA "to remedy widespread discrimination against disabled individuals." The salutary effect of the ADA cannot be understated. However, many business owners and operators might, at the same time, rightly ask whether there are any limits to the Act's reach.

Features

Online Consumer Privacy Image

Online Consumer Privacy

Ana Tagvoryan & Joshua Briones

Online service providers often collect user data for marketing, which frequently includes sharing the information with third parties. Consumers and web users who find this transmission of data an invasion of privacy can, with the help of the plaintiffs' bar, sue under various privacy statutes for alleged damages arising out of this practice.

Features

Time to Upgrade 28-Year-Old Electronic Privacy Law? Image

Time to Upgrade 28-Year-Old Electronic Privacy Law?

Andrew Ramonas

Apple Inc., Google Inc. and Microsoft Corp. are putting new pressure on Congress to update a 28-year-old law that governs how the federal government can obtain U.S. citizens' electronic data.

Features

Social Media Invades and Modernizes Employment Practices Image

Social Media Invades and Modernizes Employment Practices

Morey Raiskin & Celeste Thacker

For employers, social media sites present a potential treasure trove of information on applicants, but mining this information for use in recruiting, hiring, firing and monitoring of employees is fraught with risk. Nonetheless, some studies show that 40% of employers search social media during the hiring process. While there are not currently any laws in the United States forbidding employers from gleaning information from social media, improper use can get them into trouble.

Features

Back to School Image

Back to School

Erin Winters

With schools back in session, now is the time for employers to review hiring, payment and scheduling practices for workers under the age of 18. The myriad federal and state child labor laws that employers must heed range from work permit requirements to the hours and type of work performed, all of which vary based on an employee's age and whether school is in session.

Features

Criminal Subpoenas for Online Data Image

Criminal Subpoenas for Online Data

Ben Barnett & Rebecca Kahan Waldman

Never before has so much personal data been available anywhere but also completely outside the immediate control of the person who created it. Companies like Google and Facebook are the entities responding to government search warrants and subpoenas for individuals' personal information. Federal courts continue to struggle ' and sharply disagree ' over the scope of Fourth Amendment protections for this data.

Features

<i><b>Online Extra:</i></b>Facebook Fights to Snuff Out Privacy Suit Image

<i><b>Online Extra:</i></b>Facebook Fights to Snuff Out Privacy Suit

Ross Todd

U.S. District Judge Phyllis Hamilton was set last month to be the latest jurist in the Northern District of California to grapple with how decades-old federal wiretapping laws apply to today's technology.

Features

Interpreting China's New Trademark Law Image

Interpreting China's New Trademark Law

Xiang Gao

Despite China's quotas on film and TV program imports, and the country's aggressive content restrictions, the U.S. entertainment industry continues to look at the world's second largest economy as essential for expanding the international audience for U.S. productions. With that in mind, this article examines the first major amendments to China's trademark law in more than 20 years.

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