Legal News – LexBlogosphere: 8/5/08
By Rob La Gatta
August 5, 2008
A fine mixture of new posts and follow-ups to old ones today, from a wide array of clients. There are a lot of big stories being discussed, and although many of them are holdovers from last week, they were prominent enough to generate discussion still going strong days later.
- Cable TV company’s remote storage DVR system does not directly infringe copyright – New York attorney Richard Raysman of Thelen in the firm’s Technology Law Update
- Georgia Court of Appeals reiterates prohibition against “in any capacity” restrictions – Atlanta lawyer Michael Elkon of Seyfarth Shaw in the firm’s non-compete law blog, Trading Secrets
- A Pennsylvania court’s view of HIPPA, FERPA and student records – Pennsylvania attorney Karl Romberger of Fox Rothschild in the firm’s Education Law Blog
- EU publishes new guidance on binding corporate rules – Los Angeles lawyer Jeremy Mittman of Proskauer Rose in the firm’s Privacy Law Blog
- California Supreme Court rules open space assessment is invalid special tax under Proposition 218 – Sacramento attorney Cori Badgley of Abbott & Kindermann in the firm’s Land Use Law Blog
- Qualifying for Medicaid keeps getting harder – Spartanburg lawyer Ray Mullman of Poliakoff & Associates in the firm’s South Carolina Nursing Home Blog
- Boscov’s bankruptcy and what their suppliers should understand – Lawrenceville attorney Thomas S. Onder of Stark & Stark in the firm’s New Jersey Law Blog
- Court overturns Apollo Group securities lawsuit jury verdict – Ohio lawyer Kevin LaCroix of OakBridge Insurance Services at his blog, The D & O Diary
- Key person and group life in NY – New York attorney Cailie Currin in her Life Insurance Compliance & Regulation Law Blog
- California Supreme Court agrees to hear contingent fee public nuisance issue – Philadelphia lawyer Sean Wajert of Dechert LLP in his Mass Tort Defense Blog
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