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T.H.E. Journal February 2004 Karen Hughes Miller |
The Law Catches Up With Distance Education Voice-recognition software makes online legal instruction more efficient and effective.  |
National Real Estate Investor February 4, 2004 Parke Chapman |
Mold Litigation A Growing Market for Lenders The financial fallout from mold could very well make asbestos look like "a day at the beach" for commercial real estate financiers and owners, according to experts.  |
InternetNews February 3, 2004 Susan Kuchinskas |
Key Online Music Piracy Ruling Reviewed The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals mulls the Recording Industry of America's lawsuits against file-swappers.  |
Information Today February 2004 Dick Kaser |
'Can Spam' Law Needs to Be Enforced It looks like it will take some muscle to back up the letter of this new law. What we need next is a major suit against one of these nefarious outfits to drive the point home that spam is now illegal.  |
Reason February 2004 Jesse Walker |
Where the Wild Suits Are: Satire as "Libel" If thin-skinned Texas officials get their way, the satirists at The Onion had better watch out -- or at least begin printing "Just Kidding" in huge red letters across each page.  |
Reason February 2004 Julian Sanchez |
No-Confidence Votes Far from displaying the openness that is the hallmark of a trustworthy election system, one of the leading e-voting companies, Diebold, is using copyright law against its critics.  |
BusinessWeek February 9, 2004 Carol Marie Cropper |
This Clause Should Give You Pause Beware of service contracts that shield companies and put you at risk.  |
CIO February 1, 2004 Scott Berinato |
Courts Make Users Liable for Security Glitches Because of changes in the insurance business and some recent court decisions, it looks like this is going to be the year to watch for computer security lawsuits.  |
CFO January 30, 2004 Tim Reason |
Cheese It, the States! Corporate wrong-doers are finding state cops more aggressive than the feds.  |
CFO January 30, 2004 Kris Frieswick |
Judgment Calls Recent shareholder suits may be opening cracks in the protection afforded by the business-judgment rule. That rule has given boards wide latitude to make decisions without fear that courts will second-guess their judgment, as long as they observe their duties of loyalty and due care.  |
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