How are you feeling about yesterday’s Supreme Court decisions? Good news: LXBN members are here to help you sort it out. Spokeo v. Robins is officially trending on the site, and I’ve got a piece up about whether it’s as conclusive as once promised. And now, let’s get down to the top 10:
- Energy Insights: An Update from the First Quarter of 2016 – Seyfarth Shaw lawyers Robert S. Winner, Andrew L. Berg, and Ashley M. Hymel writing on the firm’s Environmental & Safety Law Update blog
- Supreme Court Clarifies Jurisdiction Under Securities Exchange Act – New York lawyer Jonathan Richman of Proskauer writing on their Corporate Defense and Disputes
- Fixing the Two Biggest Problems with Legal Writers – The International Lawyers Network’s director of global relationship management Lindsay Griffiths writing on her Zen and the Art of Legal Networking blog
- Three Things to Look For In Final Overtime Regulations – Shipman & Goodwin attorney Daniel Schwartz writing from Hartford on his Connecticut Employment Law Blog
- Concrete and Particularized: What the Supreme Court’s Spokeo Ruling May Mean for Privacy Class Actions and Big Data—the First in a Series – Los Angeles lawyer Tanya Forsheit of Baker Hostetler on their Data Privacy Monitor
- Supreme Court Holds in Spokeo that Plaintiffs Must Show “Real” Harm to Have Standing to Sue for Statutory Damages – Mayer Brown lawyers Andrew J. Pincus, Archis A. Parasharami, and John Nadolenco writing on the firm’s Class Defense Blog
- CJEU Advocate General Opinion: Dynamic IP Addresses are Personal Data; Member States cannot limit processing permitted by the Data Protection Directive – Frankfurt attorneys Christoph Ritzer and Sven Jacobs of Norton Rose Fulbright on their Data Protection Report
- Spokeo v. Robins: The U.S. Supreme Court Finds Concrete Injury Is Required Under Article III But Remands Back To The Ninth Circuit – Seyfarth Shaw lawyers Gerald L. Maatman, Jr.; Pamela Q. Devata; Robert T. Szyba; and Ephraim J. Pierre on their Workplace Class Action Blog
- Supreme Court Decision in Spokeo Breathes Life Into Standing Defenses – Boston lawyer Kevin M. McGinty from Mintz Levin on their Privacy & Security Matters blog
- Fraud is Broad: SCOTUS Declines to Accept Narrow Interpretation of “Actual Fraud” in 11 U.S.C. § 532(a)(2)(A) – Hughes Hubbard attorney Lauren Lipari writing from New York on their Bankruptcy Report
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