Plenty of legal news in action today, including that net neutrality is once again facing challenges. By my estimate, though the movement has a lot of support, it’s far from a sure thing in the forseeable future. Also don’t miss the latest post from Please Advise from LexBlog’s Chloe Nichols on the importance of blog goals. And now this morning’s top 10:
- Supreme Court Asked to Clarify Limits on Diagnostic Method Patents – Philadelphia lawyer Ronald C. Kern of Baker Hostetler on their Health Law Update
- State of Cannabis: Mississippi Marijuana Misses the Mark – Seattle legal intern Daniel Shortt of Harris Moure on the firm’s Canna Law Blog
- Monday Morning Regulatory Review – 4/18/16: Immigration Injury Costs & Regulation; FLSA Exemption Definition; Contraceptive Accommodation Remedies; Post Hoc Appropriate and Necessary Notice; Respirable Silica Consolidated; CFPB Appointment & Ratification; and Petitions, Delay & Funding Bars – Washington, D.C. attorney Leland Beck on his Federal Regulations Advisor
- US Women’s Soccer Team—The EEOC Complaint Process in Action – Dallas lawyer Rob Radcliff from Weinstein Radcliff on his Smooth Transitions blog
- What the LEED Pilot for Wood Is and What It Is Not – Stuart Kaplow, of Kaplow, writing from Baltimore on his Green Building Law Update
- How Much Should Big Brother Monitor (And Other BYOD Considerations) – McCarthy Tetrault attorneys Benjamin Aberant and Shana Wolch writing from Calgary on the firm’s Alberta Employer Advisor
- Connection to Someone With a Disability is Nearly Identical to an Actual Disability – Foley & Lardner lawyer Kamran Mirrafati writing from Los Angeles on the firm’s Labor & Employment Law Perspectives
- Marketing: Creating Moments that Matter – The International Lawyers’ Network director of global relationship management Lindsay Griffiths on her Zen and the Art of Legal Networking blog
- 13.769 Billion Reasons to Thank Whistleblowers on Tax Day – D.C. lawyer Stephen M. Kohn of the National Whistleblowers Center on their Whistleblowers Protection Blog
- Not all Expressions of Purported Religious Beliefs are Protected by the First Amendment, Cavanaugh v. Bartelt, Docket No. 4:14-cv-03183-JMG-CRZ Doc # 47 Filed: 04/12/16 – New Jersey attorney Eric John Marcy of Wilentz on the firm’s Jersey Justice Monitor
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