February 5, 2015
Lots and lots of good stuff today—and, I suppose, bad stuff too as the big news is the Anthem data breach, which we have covered in the Top 10. Over on LXBN, Zosha highlights Seyfarth Shaw’s Kenneth Grady in the latest iteration of our LXBN Leaders series. Total posts on the LexBlog Network today: 199.
- Will Texas Ban Texting and Driving as Forty Four Other States Have? – Dallas attorney Kay Van Wey on her blog, AdvoKayte
- Just Do It: Air Jordan, Raging Bull, and Resurrecting Copyright Infringement Claims – Washington, DC lawyer Michael Bhargava of Chadbourne on the firm’s blog, TMT Perspectives
- EEOC Charge Filings Down And Monetary Rewards To Victims Through Investigations And Litigation Plummet – Gerald L. Maatman, Jr., Christopher J. DeGroff, and Paul H. Kehoe of Seyfarth Shaw on the firm’s blog, EEOC Year-End Countdown
- Another notch in the hacking holster: Cyber outlaws hit Anthem hard – Kansas City lawyer Peter Enko of Husch Blackwell on the firm’s blog, Healthcare Law Insights
- No Representation Without Substantiation? What POM Wonderful v. FTC Means for Consumer Class Actions – Joshua Foust and Michelle Gillette of Mintz Levin on the firm’s blog, Consumer Product Matters
- Let’s Talk About Sex (in the Workplace) – San Diego lawyer Stefanie Vaudreuil of Liebert Cassidy Whitmore on the firm’s California Public Agency Labor & Employment Blog
- Three Observations about the New EEOC Statistics – Hartford attorney Daniel Schwartz of Shipman & Goodwin in his Connecticut Employment Law Blog
- Flag on the Play: Court Takes Away Employer’s Victory Because of Mistake in the Employee Manual – West Bloomfield lawyer Jason Shinn of Shinn Legal on his Michigan Employment Law Advisor
- 12th Man Down – Jessica Gutierrez Alm of Winthrop & Weinstine on the firm’s DuetsBlog
- Lawyers: Your Process Just May Be More Important than the Outcome You Achieve – Dallas, Texas lawyer coach Cordell Parvin on the Cordell Parvin Blog
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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