Cybersecurity & Privacy

  • March 06, 2026

    Meta, Google Begin Defense As Mental Harm Plaintiff Rests

    Attorneys for the plaintiff in a landmark bellwether California trial in a suit accusing Instagram and YouTube of harming children's mental health rested their case Friday, opting not to call the plaintiff's mother to testify live despite the defense portraying her as the potential cause of the plaintiff's mental health struggles.

  • March 06, 2026

    Wash. Antispam Penalties Near Cut From $500 Down To $100

    Washington lawmakers passed a bill Friday that would cut damages available to plaintiffs under the state's antispam law from $500 per offending message to just $100, significantly reducing Commercial Electronic Mail Act penalties for companies that send offending emails or text messages.

  • March 06, 2026

    Investor's Memoir 'Lifted' Account Of Sex Assault, Suit Says

    The bestselling memoir "The Tell," written by investor Amy Griffin and featured by Oprah's book club, contains a fabricated account of a middle school sexual assault that was "lifted" from the life of a teenage acquaintance, according to a privacy suit filed in California state court.

  • March 06, 2026

    Wash. Passes Bill To Outlaw Microchipping Employees

    A Washington state bill that would ban employers from forcing workers to get microchipped has cleared the state Legislature and was delivered to Gov. Bob Ferguson's desk on Thursday.

  • March 06, 2026

    Google's $135M Deal To End Data Use Suit Gets Initial Nod

    A California federal magistrate judge preliminarily approved Google's $135 million settlement to resolve a proposed class action alleging Google surreptitiously consumed Android users' mobile data, finding the deal is fair despite Google agreeing to pay nearly three times more to settle similar claims by a smaller Golden State-consumer class.

  • March 06, 2026

    TriZetto, Cognizant Hit With Class Claims Over Data Breach

    A Cognizant Technology Solutions-owned healthcare tech company was hit with a proposed class action in New Jersey federal court on Friday over its alleged failure to protect the sensitive personal and health information of thousands.

  • March 06, 2026

    Treasury Scores Early Win In DOGE Data Sharing Suit

    Two labor unions and a retirees group that claimed Department of Government Efficiency personnel were allowed to access Treasury Department computer systems can't proceed with their lawsuit, a D.C. federal judge ruled, finding they failed to establish that the agency's decisions can be considered a final agency action.

  • March 06, 2026

    Fortnite Maker Says Ex-Contractor Leaked Secrets For 'Clout'

    Fortnite maker Epic Games Inc. accused a former contractor of anonymously leaking company secrets on social media, violating his nondisclosure agreement and jeopardizing the gaming company's business relationships, according to a lawsuit filed in North Carolina federal court.

  • March 05, 2026

    Anthropic Deemed Supply Chain Risk By Pentagon, Vows Suit

    The Pentagon has officially informed Anthropic that it is a supply chain risk to the United States' national security, a designation that the artificial intelligence company plans to challenge in court as not "legally sound," according to a statement by Anthropic's CEO on Thursday.

  • March 05, 2026

    'Addiction' Became A 'Dirty Word' At Instagram, Jury Hears

    A former executive and consultant for Meta testified Thursday in bellwether litigation over claims that its subsidiary Instagram is harmful to children, telling a Los Angeles jury that between his two stints with the company, he saw "addiction" go from an openly researched topic to a taboo "dirty word."

  • March 05, 2026

    Treasury, OPM Must Face Privacy Suit Over DOGE Info Access

    The federal government must face a proposed class action accusing it of the "largest data breach" in the nation's history, after a D.C. federal judge said Wednesday that the plaintiffs alleged factual injuries suffered from the disclosure of their most sensitive information, which are "foundational to Americans' data-driven, internet-based lives."

  • March 05, 2026

    Blogger Claims Alleged Judicial Threats Came From Case Law

    A Virginia man accused of cyberstalking three Connecticut judges took the stand in his own defense Thursday, telling a jury at least some of the alleged threats were recycled from at least two First Amendment cases that, in his view, either protected a blog he oversaw or were wrongly decided.

  • March 05, 2026

    Apple AirTag Judge Compares Fight To Uber Sex Assault MDL

    A California federal judge indicated Thursday that he likely won't certify a class of stalking victims suing Apple for designing AirTags that were susceptible to abuse by stalkers, comparing the case to litigation against Uber Technologies Inc. over driver sexual assaults, which proceeded as coordinated multidistrict litigation rather than a class action.

  • March 05, 2026

    Unwanted Home-Buying Texts May Violate TCPA, Judge Says

    Texts from a real estate marketing company offering to buy a Georgia woman's home plausibly count as solicitations under the Telephone Consumer Protection Act, according to a federal judge who is refusing to let the company out of a lawsuit accusing it of violating the law.

  • March 05, 2026

    Meta Hid 'Alarming Reality' Of AI Glasses' Privacy, Suit Says

    Meta Platforms touts its artificial intelligence "smart" glasses as designed to protect users' privacy, but the tech company surreptitiously routes video captured by the wearable devices to contractors who view the footage to train Meta's AI models, according to a new proposed class action filed in California federal court.

  • March 05, 2026

    Neb. AG Hits Roblox With Suit Over Kid Safety

    Nebraska on Wednesday became the latest state to hit popular gaming platform Roblox with a suit alleging that it fails to protect children against online predators, saying even new age verification policies are not enough to safeguard minors.

  • March 05, 2026

    Former Ga. Chief Justice To Mediate Fulton Ballot Seizure

    A Georgia federal judge has tasked former Georgia Supreme Court Chief Justice Harold Melton, now a Troutman Pepper Locke LLP partner, to mediate the ongoing dispute over possession of Fulton County's 2020 election ballots after they were seized by the FBI in January.

  • March 05, 2026

    Baseball America Subscribers Drop Data-Tracking Suit

    Subscribers to Baseball America Inc. have called off their proposed class action accusing the popular media service of illegally sharing their video-watching data with tech giants Meta and Google, according to North Carolina federal court filings.

  • March 05, 2026

    Calif. Privacy Agency Dings Ford Over Opt-Out 'Friction'

    Ford Motor Co. has agreed to pay a fine of just over $375,000 and provide consumers with "easy methods" to stop the sharing and sale of their personal data in order to resolve the California privacy regulator's claims that the company added "unnecessary friction" to this opt-out process, the agency said Thursday. 

  • March 04, 2026

    Split 4th Circ. Shields Musk From USAID Deposition, For Now

    The Fourth Circuit on Wednesday ruled that Elon Musk and two former U.S. Agency for International Development officials will not, for now, have to testify in litigation ex-employees filed accusing the billionaire of illegally dismantling the foreign aid agency, saying no "extraordinary circumstances" justified the depositions.

  • March 04, 2026

    1988 Privacy Law, New Tracking Tech: Supreme Court Steps In

    The U.S. Supreme Court will soon hear a dispute over a decades-old video data privacy law, a matter that's expected to have major implications for not only the crush of litigation brewing under the statute but also for similar disputes involving the application of older statutes to the unanticipated capabilities of modern technology.

  • March 04, 2026

    Wheeling & Appealing: The Latest Must-Know Appellate Action

    If this month's circuit calendars were a March Madness bracket, we'd struggle to pick the top-seeded showdown. Big Pharma against the False Claims Act, or big business against President Donald Trump's visa fees? A big bank's view of "human life wagers," or en banc review in a State Farm class action?

  • March 04, 2026

    Meta Seeks Bench Trial, Not Jury, In Mental Health MDL

    Facebook and Instagram's parent company has had a change of heart when it comes to facing a jury on claims they caused underage users to become addicted to their platforms, resulting in emotional harm, telling the California federal judge overseeing the multidistrict litigation that they would now prefer a bench trial.

  • March 04, 2026

    Google AI Coached 'Mass Casualty' Attempt, Suicide, Suit Says

    The father of a 36-year-old Florida man who recently died by suicide sued Google LLC in California federal court Wednesday, alleging Google's chatbot Gemini deluded his son into believing it was his "AI wife," convincing him to attempt a "mass casualty" attack at Miami International Airport and then coaching his suicide.

  • March 04, 2026

    Social Media Addiction Fed Girl's Conflict With Mom, Jury Told

    A UCLA psychiatrist testified Wednesday in a landmark bellwether trial over allegations that using Instagram and YouTube harm children's mental health, saying that a girl's social media addiction contributed to friction with her mother.

Expert Analysis

  • Post-Genius Landscape Reveals Technical Stablecoin Hurdles

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    The Genius Act's implementation has revealed challenges for mass stablecoin adoption, but there are several factors that stablecoin issuers can use to differentiate themselves and secure market share, including interest rate, liquidity, and safety and security, say attorneys at Olshan Frome.

  • The Emerging Issues Shaping Real Estate Project Insurance

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    As real estate faces increasingly complex considerations — such as climate losses, "nuclear verdicts" and regulatory changes — insurance is evolving into a strategic function that should be discussed early in the planning stages of a project, says Jason Adams at Cox Castle.

  • Attys Beware: Generative AI Can Also Hallucinate Metadata

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    In addition to the well-known problem of AI-generated hallucinations in legal documents, AI tools can also hallucinate metadata — threatening the integrity of discovery, the reliability of evidence and the ability to definitively identify the provenance of electronic documents, say attorneys at Law & Forensics.

  • When Atty Ethics Violations Give Rise To Causes Of Action

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    Though the Model Rules of Professional Conduct make clear that a violation of the rules does not automatically create a cause of action, attorneys should beware of a few scenarios in which they could face lawsuits for ethical lapses, says Brian Faughnan at Faughnan Law.

  • Privacy Lessons From FTC Settlement With Chinese Toymaker

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    In U.S. v. Apitor Technology, the Federal Trade Commission recently settled with a Chinese toy manufacturer that shared children's physical location with a third-party app provider, but the privacy lessons from the settlement extend beyond companies focusing on children's products, say attorneys at Sheppard Mullin.

  • TikTok Divestiture Deal Revolves Around IP Considerations

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    The divestiture deal between the U.S. and China to resolve a security dispute over TikTok's U.S. operations is seen as a diplomatic breakthrough, but its success hinges on the treatment of intellectual property and may set a precedent in the global contest over digital sovereignty and IP control, say attorneys at Brownstein Hyatt.

  • CFIUS Trends May Shift Under 'America First' Policy

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    The arrival of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States' latest annual report suggests that the Trump administration's "America First" policy will have a measurable effect on foreign investment, including improved trendlines for investments from allied sources and increasingly negative trendlines for those from foreign adversary sources, say attorneys at Debevoise.

  • Series

    Practicing Stoicism Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Practicing Stoicism, by applying reason to ignore my emotions and govern my decisions, has enabled me to approach challenging situations in a structured way, ultimately providing advice singularly devoted to a client's interest, says John Baranello at Moses & Singer.

  • Series

    The Biz Court Digest: Texas, One Year In

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    A year after the Texas Business Court's first decision, it's clear that Texas didn't just copy Delaware and instead built something uniquely its own, combining specialization with constitutional accountability and creating a model that looks forward without losing touch with the state's democratic and statutory roots, says Chris Bankler at Jackson Walker.

  • AI Product Safety Insights May Expand Foreseeability

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    Product liability law has long held that companies are responsible for risks they knew about or should have known about — and with AI systems now able to assess and predict hazards during the design process, companies should expect that courts will likely treat such hazards as foreseeable, says Donald Fountain at Clark Fountain.

  • Series

    Law School's Missed Lessons: Educating Your Community

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    Nearly two decades prosecuting scammers and elder fraud taught me that proactively educating the public about the risks they face and the rights they possess is essential to building trust within our communities, empowering otherwise vulnerable citizens and preventing wrongdoers from gaining a foothold, says Roger Handberg at GrayRobinson.

  • Strategies For Merchants As Payment Processing Costs Rise

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    As current economic pressures and rising card processing costs threaten to decrease margins for businesses, retail merchants should consider restructuring how payments are made and who processes them within the evolving legal framework, says Tom Witherspoon at Stinson.

  • Shifting Crypto Landscape Complicates Tornado Cash Verdict

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    Amid shifts in the decentralized finance regulatory landscape, the mixed verdict in the prosecution of Tornado Cash’s founder may represent the high-water mark in a cryptocurrency enforcement strategy from which the U.S. Department of Justice has begun to retreat, say attorneys at Venable.

  • 5 Crisis Lawyering Skills For An Age Of Uncertainty

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    As attorneys increasingly face unprecedented and pervasive situations — from prosecutions of law enforcement officials to executive orders targeting law firms — they must develop several essential competencies of effective crisis lawyering, says Ray Brescia at Albany Law School.

  • Compliance Tips Amid Rising FTC Scrutiny Of Minors' Privacy

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    The Federal Trade Commission has recently rolled out multiple enforcement actions related to children's privacy, highlighting a renewed focus on federal regulation of minors' personal information and the evolving challenges of establishing effective, privacy-protective age assurance solutions, say attorneys at Nelson Mullins.

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