Top 10 in Law Blogs: Fashion Law 101, “Discovery About Discovery,” Medical Marijuana in the Workplace
November 21, 2013
The Google Books lawsuit, in which Google’s scanning of millions of books was deemed “fair use” of copyrighted material, has been a popular subject of conversation on the LexBlog Network. Tonya Gisselberg is the latest to take a look at breaking it all down. Also, Al Saikali makes a prediction on the “next wave of privacy litigation.” Total posts on the LexBlog Network today: 202.
- “Fed” Money Slingers off to Prison – Sacramento lawyer Michael Hackard on his blog, Ponzi Clawbacks
- In the Line of Fire – Dallas lawyer Jamie Ribman of Gray Reed & McGraw on the firm’s blog, Tilting the Scales
- What’s The Next Wave of Privacy Litigation? “Failure to Match” – Miami lawyer Al Saikali of Shook, Hardy & Bacon on his Data Security Computing Law
- GM Is Leaving Shanghai. Why Did It Go There In The First Place? – Seattle lawyer Dan Harris of Harris & Moure on the firm’s China Law Blog
- Fashion Law 101: How To Be a Disruptive Force – Los Angeles lawyer Staci Riordan of Fox Rothschild on the firm’s Fashion Law Blog
- Medical Marijuana – Not a Licence For Impairment in the Workplace – Calgary lawyer Erin Ludwig of Norton Rose Fulbright on the firm’s Global Workplace Insider
- “My Employee is on Facebook Four Hours a Day. What Do I Do?” – Hartford attorney Daniel Schwartz of Shipman & Goodwin in his Connecticut Employment Law Blog
- Scanning Towards a Googol Books: Google Fair Use Claims Prevail Over Authors’ Copyrights – Seattle intellectual property lawyer Tonya Gisselberg on her blog, Seattle Copyright Watch
- When is “discovery about discovery” permitted? – Columbus lawyer Jay Yurkiw of PorterWright on the firm’s blog, Employer Law Report
- EU Continues Move toward Stricter Network Neutrality Obligations – Austin Bonner, Michele Farquhar and Winston Maxwell of Hogan Lovells on the firm’s blog, Global Media and Communications
For more of the best, check out LXBN, a complete review of the top insight and commentary across the LexBlog Network.
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