Top 10 in Law Blogs: Hemp, German Class Actions, Surprise Health Care Provisions
Welcome to the middle of the week! Today on LXBN I’ve got a story about a federal trial court that said citizens don’t have the constitutional right to record the police without “challenge or criticism” of police conduct. Now without further ado, today’s top 10:
- Oregon Cannabis: Hemp is Happening (Again) – Seattle lawyer Vince Sliwoski of Harris Moure on their Canna Law Blog
- German law authorizing privacy “class actions” goes into force – Frankfurt attorneys Christoph Ritzer and Sven Jacobs on the Data Protection Report
- New U.S. Law May Impact U.S. Companies’ Ability to Import from Suppliers Abroad (Or, Enactment of H.R. 644, the Trade Facilitation and Trade Enforcement Act) – Squire Patton Boggs attorney Sarah Rathke writing out of Cleveland on their Global Supply Chain Law Blog
- Apple, the FBI, and iPhone Encryption: A Battle of Biblical Proportions with Implications for HIPAA – Fox Rothschild’s Elizabeth Litten of Princeton, New Jersey on their HIPAA, HITECH, & HIT blog
- Client Development: What Kind of Client Development Efforts Suit You Best? – Texas legal rainmaker Cordell Parvin on his Cordell Parvin Blog
- Stay Open & Enjoy the Moments: How High School Lessons Apply to Lawyers – International Lawyers Network’s director of global relationship management Lindsay Griffiths on her Zen and the Art of Legal Networking
- Surprise Health Care Bill Protections Addressed in President Obama’s 2017 Budget for Health and Human Services – Epstein Becker Green lawyers Basil Kim and Jackie Selby writing from New York on the firm’s Health Law Advisor
- Note to Self: Posting My Beach Vacation Photos on Facebook During FMLA Leave is Not a Good Idea – Chicago lawyer Jeff Nowak of Franczek Radelet on their FMLA Insights blog
- Increased Scrutiny of Drug Pricing—What Should Pharmaceutical Companies Know – BakerHostetler’s Lee H. Rosebush, Nita Garg, and Lindsay Holmes on the firm’s Health Law Update
- Congress Looking at Potential Energy-Sector Cybersecurity and Privacy Reform – Washington, D.C. lawyers C. Kyle Simpson and Jared Bomberg of Hogan Lovells writing on their Chronicle of Data Protection
Posted in: