LexBlog Law Network Roundup – 8/21/2009
August 21, 2009
It’s a beautiful Friday out here in Montana, and the weekend is just about in our grasp. Be sure to check out Carolyn Elefant’s most recent post, and enjoy Victoria Pynchon’s fourth post in her series on breaking negotiation impasses. So, without further ado, here are today’s top posts from the LexBlogosphere.
- True Solos Have True Grit, But Law School Rewards the Ephemeral – Washington, D.C. lawyer Carolyn Elefant in her blog, My Shingle
- Copyright Myths Debunked – Southern Californian attorney Jonathan Pink of Brian Cave LLP on their Art Law Blog
- Kreisler or Yellowstone? The Reach of the Equitable Subordination Doctrine – Ohio lawyer Ken Rathburnof of PorterWright on the Banking & Finance Law Report
- NIGC Proposes Gaming Machine Revisions that Could Cost Tribes Millions – Seattle attorney Anthony Broadman of Williams Kastner on their blog Northwest Indian Law & Business Advisor
- Court Articulates Analysis Under FRE 502, Finds No Waiver of Inadvertently Produced Email – David Bowerman of K&L Gates on the firm’s Electronic Discovery Law blog
- Fired for blogging? Nothing you can do in Illinois – Chicago attorney
- The Five Most Effective Ways to Break Negotiation Impasse: Part IV – Lawyer-mediator Victoria Pynchon in her Settle It Now Negotiation Blog
- Cost of legal services is controllable – Legal marketing expert Ed Poll in his LawBizBlog
- Can One Commit Legal Malpractice by Defining Perjury ? – Andrew Lavoott Bluestone on the New York Attorney Malpractice Blog
- French Data Protection Authority Issues Guidelines on Personal Data Transfers Pursuant to U.S. Discovery Obligations – The blogging lawyers and attorneys at Hunton & Williams on their Privacy & Information Security Law Blog
Posted in: