Top 10 in Law Blogs: Oracle-Google to SCOTUS, Star Wars IP, Citizens United Rules
October 10, 2014
Friday’s here and it’s time to head out into the weekend. Before we do, it’s the last Top 10 of the week. In it, we have another Facebook firing case, Oracle and Google potentially going at it at the Supreme Court and an important lesson from Phil Mickelson. Total posts on the LexBlog Network today: 167.
- Did The Uninsured Driver Have First Class Legal Representation — Courtesy Of Your Insurance Carrier? – Hunstville lawyer Jeff Blackwell of Hornsby, Watson, Hornsby, Blackwell on his blog, Alabama Litigation Review
- Employee’s Claims Undermined By Her Facebook Posts – Baltimore lawyer Fiona Ong of Shawe Rosenthal on the firm’s blog, The Labor & Employment Report
- Landmark Oracle-Google Android Copyright Dispute May End Up In Supreme Court – New York attorney Jeff Neuburger of Proskauer Rose in the firm’s New Media & Technology Law Blog
- Breaking Old Ground: California Again Amends Breach Law – Nathan D. Taylor and Patrick Bernhardt 0f Morrison Foerster on the firm’s blog, Socially Aware
- Court Bucks Notion That There Is Nationwide Jurisdiction If The EEOC Sues Under Title VII – Chicago lawyer Gerald L. Maatman, Jr. of Seyfarth Shaw on the firm’s EEOC Year-End Countdown
- In Brief: The FEC’s New Citizens United Rules – Brian Svoboda and Andrew Werbrock of Perkins Coie on the firm’s blog, In the Arena: Law & Politics Update
- Star Wars: Redefining Trademark and Copyright Law Since A Long Time Ago – Minneapolis lawyer Tim Sitzmann of Winthrop & Weinstine on the firm’s DuetsBlog
- Lessons from the Ryder Cup: don’t blast the boss in front of a world-wide audience – Manchester lawyer Laura Tracey of Squire Patton Boggs on the firm’s blog, Employment Law Worldview
- A reader asks: “Is it me, or has job interviewing become really complicated?” – Winston-Salem attorney Robin Shea of Constangy on the firm’s blog, Employment & Labor Insider
- What a Surprise! US Supreme Court Relies on Unsubstantiated Internet Facts – Dallas lawyer Peter Vogel on his Internet, Information Technology & e-Discovery Blog
Posted in: