Top 10 in Law Blogs: Pat Summitt, Colorado Student Data Privacy Bill, and of course Brexit.
June 28, 2016
Tuesday’s Top 10 features a good variety of items, but if there is one story you should check out, it is Melissa Hunter Smith’s reflection on Pat Summitt and the impact she had on others.
- Pat Summitt: a Brand That Lives On – Melissa Hunter Smith of Stites and Harbison looks back at how Pat Summitt transcended the sports world and how her brand will forever live on.
- Colorado Student Data Privacy Bill – Mintz Levin’s Privacy & Security Matters blog gives their advice on what education software providers now need to know, and who is currently covered under the bill.
- Location, Location, Location: Franchise Litigation in the Venue of Your Choosing – A Massachusetts franchisor can sue an Oregon franchisee in Massachusetts, according to a recent decision from the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit.
- Agreement in principle announced for an EU regime on conflict minerals – The Global Policy Watch blog reviews the terms of a deal that has been in the making for three years.
- Employee Error Accounts for Most Security Breaches – The Manufacturing Industry Advisor gives a few tips on what your company can do to prevent a security breach.
- Can the UK Government change its mind after the UK has given the EU a Brexit notice? – In the event that the UK Government actually attempts to withdraw any termination notice rendered to the European Council it would depend on the then prevailing circumstances listed inside.
- How (Not) to Designate a Trademark in China – Matt Dresden of the China Law Blog analyzes how some companies may be sending out the wrong message.
- EU Referendum – what does it mean for alternative capital providers? – Reed Smith’s Structured Finance in Brief goes over two key consequences the alternative finance industry is facing after Brexit.
- New whistleblowing rules for regulated entities in the UK – The New Rules will apply to UK regulated banks, building societies and credit unions with total gross assets exceeding £250 million.
- Illinois Supreme Court Agrees to Decide Whether Ice Patches From Allegedly Negligent Maintenance Can Create Liability – Should property owners be liable for others injuries caused by rural accumulations of snow and ice on their property?
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