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Showing posts with label #legal #technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #legal #technology. Show all posts

Friday, September 16, 2016

Melania #Trump Libel Suit Seen as Warning Shot #Law


Melania Trump speaking at the 2016 Republican National Convention in Cleveland on July 18. Credit: Ron Sachs / CNP
Melania Trump speaking at the 2016 Republican National Convention in Cleveland on July 18. Credit: Ron Sachs / CNP
Apologizing won’t get you anywhere with Melania Trump.
At least that’s how it looks in the wake of a fresh libel lawsuit against the UK’s Daily Mail and a Maryland blogger over articles referencing rumors that Republican presidential candidate’s wife was a sex worker in the 1990s.
Melania Trump sued the two outlets on Thursday for a combined $150 million despite the fact that they yanked down the offending articles roughly a week ago. She isrepresented by L.A. litigator Charles Harder, who gained fame for suing Gawker Media on behalf of former pro wrestler Hulk Hogan. Trump’s suit, filed in state court in Maryland, comes after Harder fired off a warning shot in August to a number of media outlets including Politico and The Guardian.
Blogger Webster Tarpley, who runs Tarpley.net, posted a retraction on Aug. 22 after receiving a warning letter. He also apologized for “any duress and harm [Trump] may have endured” as a result of his Aug. 2 post, which said that she was “reportedly obsessed by fear of salacious revelations by wealthy clients from her time as a high-end escort.”
The Daily Mail, according to the complaint, on Aug. 26 removed an Aug. 19 article referring to a book written by a Slovenian journalist, which alleged that Trump worked in “something like a gentleman’s club” when she lived in Milan. (The newspaper also published a retraction on Thursday.)
All of that was to no avail. The lawsuit says the articles damaged Trump’s “good name and reputation as a prominent woman in American business, politics and fashion.”
Stunning though the monetary demand may be, media lawyers say the fact that the media outlets pulled the stories down so quickly could significantly diminish any award, even if a jury were to find that the outlets had committed libel.
“In the age of the internet, stories pop up very quickly and they get tamped down very quickly if there’s reason for them to be discredited. And the damages aren’t what they used to be when you had an article published in the newspaper and days would go by” before a correction was run, said Thomas Kelley, a partner at Levine Sullivan Koch & Schulz, the firm that defended Gawker.
There’s also a high hurdle for libel cases brought by public figures, Kelley said. Clearing that hurdle typically means proving that there was no basis whatsoever for reporting the controversial claims, and that the reporter did not attempt to put them in context or provide balance.
Kelley also said the suit was probably intended to serve as a warning to other media outlets.
“This may not be the last incendiary allegation that comes out of the woodwork,” he said of the escort rumor. “And I’m sure that the Trump campaign would like to make it well known that this is how they’re going to respond.”
Harder did not respond to a phone call on Thursday.
Karl Olson, a media lawyer at Ram, Olson, Cereghino & Kopcyznski in San Francisco, saw the move as reflective of Donald Trump’s overall attitude toward the media throughout his presidential campaign.
“My general perspective on Trump is he has a long history of trying to intimidate the press and a long history of having incredibly thin skin, which is kind of amazing for somebody that wants to be the president of the United States,” Olson said. “His feelings about the press are kind of more aligned with Vladirmir Putin.”
Tarpley, in a defiant statement, called the suit “a blatant attempt to intimidate not only me but journalists of all stripes into remaining silent with regard to public figures. This lawsuit is a direct affront to First Amendment principles and free speech in our democratic society.”
Ben Hancock can be reached at bhancock@alm.com. On Twitter: @benghancock
    Indust

    Judge Discusses Application of #FRCP #Law

    Judges Discuss Applications of Amendments to Federal Rules of Civil Procedure

    At the 2016 Conference on Preservation Excellence, six current and former federal judges discussed key e-discovery cases from the past year. Here are eight they explored in depth.
    , Legaltech News
        | 0 Comments
    It's all well and good to discuss the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (FRCP) amendments—Legaltech News has done its fair share over the past nine-plus months since they went into effect. But in a practical sense, how are they being applied in courts?
    As it turns out, it's been a mixed bag, and even federal judges don't agree on some of the nuances of how the new rules should be applied. At the 2016 Conference on Preservation Excellence (PREX), six current and former federal judges discussed 12 key e-discovery cases from the past year. Here are the eight cases the judges explored more in-depth, along with some insights from those in charge of making decisions.

    The Cast

    • Ron Hedges, former U.S. magistrate judge on the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey and current senior counsel, Dentons.
    • Frank Maas, U.S. magistrate Judge, U.S. Southern District of New York
    • Andrew Peck, U.S. magistrate judge, U.S. Southern District of New York
    • Xavier Rodriguez, U.S. district judge for the Western District of Texas
    • Shira Scheindlin, former U.S. district judge for the Southern District of New York and now of counsel with Stroock & Stroock & Lavan LLP, New York
    • David Waxse, U.S. magistrate judge, U.S. District of Kansas

    The Cases

    1. O'Berry v. Turner (M.D. Ga.)
    In this case, Turner, driving for ADM Trucking, crashed into O'Berry in 2013. Turner's manager, rather than preserving the employee's driving log electronically, printed out a paper copy of the log, put it in a manila folder, and subsequently lost the record during a move. "The court found that printing and storing a single printed copy did not constitute intent to preserve, but then the court took an additional step and said there was intent to deprive," Judge Scheindlin explained.
    Judge Scheindlin: "The court really dwelled on the fact that nobody contacted this manager until February 2016, despite the fact the accident happened in 2013." She also added that ADM's acts were "shiftless," saying, "They were returning this information over, and to me it seemed purposeful."
    Judge Peck, however, disagreed on the definition of intent: "To me, it is a clear purpose to deprive the other side of the information."
    2. Shawe v. Elting (Del. Chancery Court)
    In the case of a relationship gone wrong, the Delaware Chancery Court was asked to settle a dispute in which two parties were splitting up business assets of, ironically, a company that conducted e-discovery and other forensics. During discovery, Shawe gained access to ex-girlfriend Elting's emails, made an image of her computer, discarded his cellphone under circumstances the court called "inexplicable," and deleted emails that were later recovered. The court ordered Shawe to pay 33 percent of the other side's legal fees for the whole trial, as well as 100 percent of expenses incurred during litigation of sanctions hearings.

    Friday, October 09, 2015

    Vote for BEST LEGAL BLOG - GigaLaw !

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    Today is the final day of voting in The Expert Institute's "Best Legal Blog" contest. GigaLaw is currently in the top 10 overall and No. 2 in the technology law category.

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    GigaLaw Daily News

    Clinton’s E-mail Server Targeted from China, S. Korea, Germany
    Computer hackers in China, South Korea and Germany tried to attack Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton’s private email server after she left the U.S. State Department in February 2013, the Associated Press reported. “It was not immediately clear whether the attempted intrusions into Clinton’s server were serious espionage threats or the sort of nuisance attacks that hit computer servers the world over,” the AP said, citing a congressional document.
    Read the article: Reuters

    Hacking at Uber Reportedly Tied to Executive at Lyft
    Eight months after disclosing a major data breach, ride service Uber is focusing its legal efforts on learning more about an Internet address that it has persuaded a court could lead to identifying the hacker. That address, two sources familiar with the matter say, can be traced to the chief of technology at its main U.S. rival, Lyft.
    Read the article: Reuters

    Microsoft E-mail Case Called ‘Matter of National Sovereignty’
    Since December 2013, Microsoft has been engaged in a pivotal battle with the U.S. government over e-mail stored on one of its company servers in Ireland. The government’s attorneys say the U.S. simply wants evidence linked to a narcotics case. Microsoft says if it loses the case, the consequences will resound well beyond the fate of an alleged drug dealer.
    Read the article: Bloomberg

    Samsung Says Users’ Payment Info Not Compromised
    Samsung Electronics Co. said that the personal payment information of users of its mobile payment system wasn’t compromised despite a reported hacking incident at LoopPay, a U.S.-based startup it bought earlier this year. Samsung said in a statement that the incident involved three servers on LoopPay’s internal office network and as soon as the incident was discovered, the U.S. company brought in professional security teams to investigate and quarantine devices.

    Wednesday, March 04, 2015

    Why work in small# law? Blogging and #socialmedia

     in Blogging, Social Media Principles

    small law firm
    Solo practioner and author, Carolyn Elefant (@carolynelefantasks what would want to make you work as a lawyer for a small law firm.
    Her point being that small law firms do not want to pay associates much. Newer lawyers require training, the associate may move on afterwards and associates don’t bring in business right away.
    Elefant wonders whether there is some middle ground between paying “slave labor” and attempting to match the pay at larger firms. She asked her readers, whether a “newbie” or  more experienced lawyer looking for a postion, what would make you seek a small law firm?
    Would it be the chance for hands-on experience? An opportunity to get in on the ground floor and advance? Or flexible scheduling and perks and benefits like paid CLE or free lunch? Perhaps if solos and smalls had an idea of what potential employees were seeking, they might be better able to accommodate those wishes.
    http://goo.gl/uVITzg

    Please RT 

    Friday, December 19, 2014

    TechnoLawyer: Top Legal Products of 2014

    Top 2014 TechnoLawyer products included document automation, document management and litigation management tools.

    , Law Technology News
        | 1 Comments

    The TechnoLawyer Blog unveiled a list of top products in 2014 published on the TL Newswire—all according to reader interest—said attorney and TechnoLawyer publisher Neil Squillante. The list was compiled from 200 new products reported in the newswire during the year and reader interest compiled from the number of page views per story.
    Squillante reports there were several themes throughout the winning products: document automation, document management, software integrations and litigation management. Here’s a closer look at the gold, silver and bronze awards.
    Gold: Coming in on the top of the legal tech product podium ispdfDocs 4.1. Squillante said it provides the basics of converting documents to PDF and is designed specifically for law firms. It also has advanced tools for assembling case notebooks and electronic briefs.


    Read more: http://www.lawtechnologynews.com/id=1202712849043/TechnoLawyer-Top-Legal-Products-of-2014#ixzz3MMFmlVp1

    Monday, June 09, 2014

    Can Corporate Counsel Tame Cloud Computing?

    , LexisNexis

    Cloud computing seems to be the future and corporations are jumping on the bus. But is this bus of the future secure? Is it reliable? Is it safe?
    Some experts think that cloud computing could cut corporate IT costs by half. Because of their scale, cloud providers can ostensibly pay for the best in technology and expertise, which translates into better reliability and security than a company could manage in-house. The cloud also adds flexibility, with usage-based fee structures and the ability to scale performance up higher than any typical corporate IT department could even dream of. With such a formidable upside, there needs to be a considerable downside for cloud adoption to be even debatable. Unfortunately, there is.
    Read more: http://www.lawtechnologynews.com/native-ad?mvi=13f5a72bce1c4307b663dab4003aa5e2#!/#ixzz34A6BcEHu

    Most Law Firms Are Refurbishing Websites

    , Law Technology News
        |0 Comments

    Conceptual image about how a smartphone with internet open a virtual door to worldwide information sharing.
    Conceptual image about how a smartphone with internet open a virtual door to worldwide information sharing.
    Almost all law firms have updated or redesigned their websites in the last three years, according to a new survey from Primary Research Group Inc. The research group polled 20 law firms that ranged in size from two partners and 12 employees, to 900 partners and 2,500 employees. The Survey of Law Firm Website Management Practices includes results from U.S., Canadian and U.K.-based firms, and features data on how firms manage websites and social media.
    Notably, 85 percent of the respondents said their firms have upgraded their website in the past three years, and a large majority used outside help to do so. Almost half the firms noted that their redesign was done largely or entirely by freelancers or consultants, and another one-third used some help from freelancers or consultants. Fewer than 10 percent of firms redesigned their website without outside help.


    Read more: http://www.lawtechnologynews.com/id=1401806577750/Most-Firms-Are-Refurbishing-Websites%0D%0A#ixzz34A5aBuFg

    Friday, May 30, 2014

    Pentagon Lays Claim to 'Hack-Proof' Drone

    "Hack-proof" drone technology developed by DARPA could be made available to the commercial sector.
    , Law Technology News
        |0 Comments

    cartoon drone
    First it was the Titanic’s unsinkable ship.  Then it was Oracle’s “unbreakable” campaign.  Now, it seems the Pentagon’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is claiming they’ve built a “hack proof drone,” according to Jaikumar Vijayan of ComputerWorld.com.
    Kris Osborn, of the military blog, Defense Tech, reports the software was designed to “thwart cyber attacks.”  He says the project has been going on for several years and originated at the University of Califiornia, San Diego and the University of Washington.  Program manager Kathleen Fischer told Osborn, “the software is mathematically proven to be invulnerable to large classes of attack.”


    Read more: http://www.lawtechnologynews.com/id=1202657312195/Pentagon-Lays-Claim-to-%27Hack-Proof%27-Drone#ixzz33DUjPN4B

    Tuesday, February 04, 2014

    The Legaco Express for Pagalegals

    Introducing a new and exciting publication for the modern Paralegal from

    Legaco LLC

    .


    © 2012 by IAML Law Journal
    A Law Review for Paralegals?
    Responding to the overwhelming response to creating both, a newsletter and a blog dedicated to paralegal causes and the many ideas received from you, The Legaco Express is launching The Legaco Journal for Paralegals to help facilitate the sharing of research papers, theses, and in-depth topical articles within the paralegal community.

    Thursday, January 09, 2014

    2013 E-Discovery Case Highlights - Legal Technology News


    Many lessons can be taken away from the 2013 electronic data discovery opinions.
    First, be careful not to rely on the federal taxation-of-costs statute to recoup all EDD expenditures. The Fourth Circuit and the Federal Circuit both narrowly defined recoverable costs, albeit with slight variances. However, a federal court in California awarded defendants substantial attorneys’ fees associated with computer-assisted document review in a patent and trade secret case where defendants won summary judgment.

    Monday, December 23, 2013

    Discovery on the Go - Law Technology News

    Discovery on the Go

    As lawyers embrace smartphones and tablets, e-discovery vendors race to complete mobile options to manage and perform e-discovery tasks.

    Anyone in 2013 would be hard pressed to name a technology hotter than mobile. New devices — with bigger, better screens and faster connections to the office or to the web — are hitting the market at a head-spinning pace. For lawyers and their firms, tablet choices and capabilities, in particular, are growing at warp speed: Apple Inc.'s iPad, an array of Android-based devices, and Microsoft's new Surface are all winning fans with their laptop-like power. But when it comes to fundamental yet technically complex tasks, such as electronic data discovery, how, exactly, are legal professionals using — or wanting to use — these mobile devices?

    We know that legal professionals already use mobile d


    Read more: http://www.law.com/jsp/lawtechnologynews/PubArticleLTN.jsp?id=1202585467397&Discovery_on_the_Go#ixzz2oKNoMani


    Read more: http://www.law.com/jsp/lawtechnologynews/PubArticleLTN.jsp?id=1202585467397&Discovery_on_the_Go#ixzz2oKNUNyBp

    Read more: http://www.law.com/jsp/lawtechnologynews/PubArticleLTN.jsp?id=1202585467397&Discovery_on_the_Go#ixzz2oKNUNyBp

    Tuesday, December 17, 2013

    Does Your Social Media Policy 'Read Like the Patriot Act' - Legal Technology News

    Law firm social media policies should be specific, but those that border on the overbearing can do more harm than good.

    You know you’re in for a laugh when the blogosphere gets hold of a law firm’s social media policy that “reads like the Patriot Act.”
    New York City-based global law firm Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy implemented a new social media policy in May that Joe Patrice for Above the Law recently picked apart. Milbank’s policy warns employees that contributing to Internet forums and social media sites can leave the firm wide open to “personal and professional embarrassment, breaches of confidentiality, real or perceived violations of privacy and identity theft, and the risk of publishing views or information that may be inconsistent with the interests of one or more Firm clients, among other hazards.”
    That’s all fine and dandy, but Patrice takes issue t


    Read more: http://www.law.com/jsp/lawtechnologynews/PubArticleLTN.jsp?id=1387044059856&Does_Your_Social_Media_Policy_Read_Like_the_Patriot_Act#ixzz2oEjwWaUE