And we’re back! Hopefully everyone’s rested after a long weekend, and ready to get back into the legal blogging game. Without further ado, let’s get to it:
- Will the Yates Memo’s Emphasis on Individual Prosecution Have A Counterproductive Impact? – RT ProExec attorney and executive vice president Kevin LaCroix writing on his The D&O Diary
- Federal Appeals Court SIdes with NLRB—Holds Arbitration Agreement and Class Action Waiver Violates Employee Rights and Unenforceable – Epstein Becker Green lawyer Steven Swirsky writing from New York on the firm’s Management Memo
- NAD Addresses Disclosures in Native Ads – Washington, D.C. attorney Gonzalo E. Mon from Kelley Drye writing on the firm’s Ad Law Access
- Our Veterans Deserve Access to MMJ/Happy Memorial Day – Seattle lawyer Hilary Bricken of Harris Moure writing on their Canna Law Blog
- Utilizing IP Addresses to Subpoena Internet Service Providers (ISPs) – Vorys lawyers Colleen M. Devanney and Jordan S. Cohen writing from Cincinnati on the firm’s Internet Defamation Removal Attorneys blog
- How to Improve Your Privacy by Staying Off Databases – New York attorney Philip Segal of Charles Griffin Intelligence writing on their The Ethical Investigator
- Towards A Unified Theory Of Aging And Cancer – Philadelphia lawyer Max Kennerly of Kennerly Loutey writing on his Litigation & Trial
- “Stronger” Now—California Conservatorships Can Provide a Helping Hand to Young Adults – Downey Brand lawyer Karina Stanhope writing from Sacramento on the firm’s Trust on Trial blog
- Why Lawsuit Funding May Go Mainstream – Dallas attorney Barry Barnett from Susman Godfrey on his The Contingency
- FDA’s Foreign Supplier rule has an especially ambitious agenda – Montana freelance journalist Cathy Siegner on the Food Safety News blog
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