Legal News – LexBlogosphere: 6/30/08
By Rob La Gatta
June 30, 2008
Back to the work week this morning, and a busy start at that (which partially explains why this post is coming so late in the day). MySpace, shareholder activism, and the substantial change doctrine are just a few of the issues making news with these bloggers today.
- Delaware law on shareholder consents and removal of directors at heart of InBev bid for Anheuser-Busch – Wilmington attorney Francis G.X. Pileggi of Fox Rothschild in his Delaware Corporate and Commercial Litigation Blog
- CDA protects MySpace from underage user’s negligence claim – Washington, D.C. lawyer Scott J. Carpenter of Proskauer Rose in the firm’s Privacy Law Blog
- Re-approval of expired entitlements can track prior CEQA documentation, subject to the substantial change doctrine – Sacramento attorney Katherine J. Hart of Abbott & Kindermann in the firm’s Land Use Law Blog
- IRS standard mileage rate change – Lancaster lawyer Matthew Grosh of Russell Krafft & Gruber in the firm’s Pennsylvania Employment Law Blog
- Establishing your credibility: nothing to do with lunch – Adrian Lurssen at JD Supra in the legal resource site’s accompanying blog, JD Scoop
- From preemption to ERISA standing, and lots of things in-between – Massachusetts attorney Stephen D. Rosenberg of The McCormack Firm in his Boston ERISA & Insurance Litigation Blog
- The real problem with radio – The Media Institute’s vice president Richard T. Kaplar in his organization’s Media & Communications Policy Blog
- Changes for 2009 in Arizona – Gilbert lawyer Stephen Follett in his Arizona Estate Planning & Probate Blog
- Shareholder activism and the “eclipse of the public corporation” – Philadelphia attorney Max Kennerly of The Beasley Firm in his blog, Litigation & Trial
- 4G and the mobile web: WiMAX vs LTE – Chicago lawyer Sam Conforti in his Software Licensing & Master Service Agreements Blog
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