Over the hump of the week, with only one more day before what looks like it’s going to be a bright, warm weekend here in Seattle. Speaking of bright, check out our LXBN Leaders profile this week of the team behind Socially Aware, who’ve built a blog run on enthusiasm and creativity. And now, today’s top 10:
- US District Court Finds Digitally Remastered Pre-1972 Sound Recordings Are “Derivative Works” Covered By Federal Law – Dismisses Suit against Broadcaster Seeking Over-the-Air Performance Royalties – Washington, D.C. attorney David Oxenford of Wilkinson Barker Knauer writing on his Broadcast Law Blog
- Innocents Abroad: Lost laptop with customer data – London lawyer Susan Foster from Mintz Levin writing on their Privacy & Security Matters blog
- Future-Proofing Privacy: The Concept of Personal Data Revisited – The team behind Hogan Lovells’ Chronicle of Data Protection
- Travel Time: An Added Complication to New Overtime Rules – Shipman & Goodwin’s Dan Schwartz writing from Hartford on his Connecticut Employment Law Blog
- Fourth Circuit joins other circuits holding no warrant is required for cell tower data – Hartford lawyer Kathleen Dion of Robinson & Cole on the firm’s Data Privacy & Security Insider
- Attorney Development: Purpose, Vision, and Core Values – Texas legal marketer Cordell Parvin writing on his Cordell Parvin Blog
- Florida district court rules it lacks jurisdiction to determine unauthorized practice charge – Thompson Hine lawyer Karen Rubin writing from Cleveland on the firm’s The Law for Lawyers Today blog
- Menominee Hemp Lawsuit Goes Up in Smoke – Harris Moure’s Hilary Bricken writing out of Seattle on their Canna Law Blog
- The Cost of Lean (Part 1) – Chicago lean law evangelist Kenneth Grady of Seyfarth Shaw on his Seytlines
- Steptoe Cyberlaw Podcast—Interview with Angelos Keromytis – Washington, D.C. lawyer Stewart Baker of Steptoe & Johnson on their Steptoe Cyberblog
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