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By Gabrielle Orum Hernández | May 30, 2017
The digital edition of The Wagstaffe Group Practice Guide: Federal Civil Procedure Before Trial contains over 150 explanatory videos.
1 minute read
By C. Ryan Barber | May 26, 2017
The National Law Journal obtained several responses from companies that received letters from the FTC this year urging greater disclosures of any paid relationships that involve so-called social media "influencers." The agency and consumer advocacy groups have raised concern that influencer advertising can give the impression of an organic endorsement when, in fact, there is a business relationship behind the product promotion.
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By Jenna Greene | May 19, 2017
A team from Kirkland & Ellis led by partner Craig Primis persuaded a federal judge in New York to toss a pair of suits alleging that Facebook Inc. supports terrorist organizations by allowing the groups to use its platform.
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By Brenda Sapino Jeffreys | May 19, 2017
Trial lawyer Rachel Lindsay stars on Season 13 of "The Bachelorette, " an ABC reality television program.
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By Jason Grant | May 15, 2017
A Manhattan lawyer may face sanctions for failing to produce documents related to the whereabouts of his corporate client after nearly a year of "remarkably uninformative" and "implausible" discovery responses, a magistrate judge has ruled.
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By Todd Cunningham | May 8, 2017
A group or individual known as "The Dark Overlord" claims to have digital copies of 38 television shows and is trying to extort money from studios, networks and post-production companies.
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By David Ruiz | April 28, 2017
Former commissioner for the U.S. Federal Trade Commission Julie Brill will be deputy general counsel and report directly to Microsoft president and chief legal officer Brad Smith. Brill joins the company after roughly a year with Hogan Lovells.
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By Marcia Coyle | April 28, 2017
In the U.S. Supreme Court term that ended last June, Justice Samuel Alito turned to books most often to bolster his opinions, while Justice Anthony Kennedy—the court's most influential voter—made least use of the wisdom embodied in books. Justices cite books for a variety of reasons, Yale Law School's Linda Greenhouse, a veteran high court observer, writes in "The Books of the Justices" in the latest Michigan Law Review.
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By Sue Reisinger | April 25, 2017
A panel sponsored by the American Bar Association's Standing Committee on Law and National Security explored those lines in a webcast Tuesday. "Whistleblowers, Leaks and the Media: The Legal Rules" included lawyers and journalists who have been caught up in national security issues.
1 minute read
By Gabrielle Orum Hernández | April 21, 2017
The new chatbot hopes to provide a new public face for barristers' offices.
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