| Old Articles: <Older 651-660 Newer> |
 |
Inc. March 2004 Jess McCuan |
When an Addict Seeks a Job Fresh from rehab, a former worker wants his job back. What can you do? The Supreme Court recently ruled that you don't necessarily have to hire back former addicts.  |
Inc. March 2004 Bobbie Gossage |
Lawyers Rethink Their Pay The American Bar Association is seriously considering new pay rules.  |
AskMen.com Dan Carter |
How To Write A Will A last will and testament ensures that your estate will be managed according to your wishes, and will circumvent family squabbles and government intervention in your personal business.  |
Inc. March 2004 Joseph Rosenbloom |
Controversial IPA Silences a Watchdog One of the most controversial Inc. 500 companies ever wins a legal battle against an ex-employee who ran a website to monitor the comany.  |
InternetNews March 11, 2004 Roy Mark |
Washington Beefs Up Can Spam The two powerful federal agencies empowered as the whip hand of the Can Spam Act began the process Thursday of fully implementing the United States' first national law aimed at curbing unsolicited bulk e-mail.  |
InternetNews March 10, 2004 Roy Mark |
Major E-Mail Providers Bare Can Spam Teeth AOL, EarthLink, Yahoo! and Microsoft use new federal law to go after kingpin spammers.  |
InternetNews March 10, 2004 Michael Singer |
DoJ, Oracle to Set Legal Ground Rules Lawyers with the U.S. Department of Justice, Oracle, and PeopleSoft are scheduled to meet in court Wednesday to hammer out a trial schedule and pretrial motions over Oracle's hostile bid for PeopleSoft  |
InternetNews March 10, 2004 Michael Singer |
Judge: Oracle Can See Competitors' Info Oracle lawyers can view sensitive information about Peoplesoft and other vendors as they prepare for a June 7 showdown with the DoJ.  |
The Motley Fool March 10, 2004 Alyce Lomax |
The Anti-Spam Squad It seems politics and spam make strange bedfellows. Some of the Internet's heavy hitters filed a collective lawsuit today against spammers.  |
InternetNews March 9, 2004 Ryan Naraine |
PayPal Slapped with $150K Fine PayPal's user agreement misrepresented the protections consumers enjoyed when an affiliated merchant failed to deliver merchandise.  |
| <Older 651-660 Newer> Return to current articles. |