August 17, 2015
In some very big news, the NLRB halted Northwestern football players’ efforts to unionize. We have multiple points on the subject today. Over on LXBN, Zosha writes on the subject of automatically registering people to vote. Total posts on the LexBlog Network today: 188.
- NLRB Declines to Exercise Jurisdiction Over Student-Athletes’ Attempt to Unionize – For Now –
- Consensual Third-Party Releases: What Constitutes “Consent”? – New York lawyer Christy Rivera of Chadbourne on the firm’s blog, Zone of Insolvency
- Declaring War on Drones: Is it a Crime to Shoot Down a Drone over Your Property? – Dallas lawyer Drew York of Gray Reed on the firm’s blog, Tilting the Scales
- NLRB Declines to Assert Jurisdiction Over Northwestern University Football Players – New York lawyer Seth Borden of McGuireWoods on the firm’s blog, Labor Relations Today
- Four Essential Steps For Protecting Your Intellectual Property – Pittsburgh lawyer Brienne Terril of Fox Rothschild on the firm’s blog, Emerging Companies Insider
- A Deeper Dive: Data Security Incident? Don’t Panic – New York lawyer Gerald Ferguson of BakerHostetler on the firm’s Data Privacy Monitor
- The GitHub Attack, Part 1: Making International Cyber Law the Ugly Way – Washington, DC lawyer Stewart Baker of Steptoe & Johnson on the Steptoe Cyberblog
- DirecTV’s Rob Lowe Ads Found to be Misleading – Washington, DC lawyer Gonzalo Mon of Kelley Drye on the firm’s blog, AdLaw Access
- The Justice Department Has Some Things to Tell You about Cybersecurity – Raleigh attorney David Smyth of Brooks Pierce on their blog, Cady Bar the Door
- The “Home Of The Throwed Rolls” — A New Hot Coffee Case? – Philadelphia lawyer Max Kennerly of The Beasley Firm on his blog, Litigation & Trial
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