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Minnesota’s Attempt to Copy California’s Constitutionally Defective Age Appropriate Design Code is an Utter Fail (Guest Blog Post)

Technology & Marketing Law Blog

by guest blogger Jess Miers, Legal Advocacy Counsel at Chamber of Progress [Eric’s intro: last year I blogged about Minnesota’s flirtation with mandatory age verification. In an attempt to address this concern, Minnesota offers some protection by maintaining the confidentiality of information subject to attorney-client privilege.

Copying 126
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LIVE! FROM A COURTHOUSE NEAR YOU: HOW SHOULD WE ADDRESS PRIVACY CONCERNS FROM LIVESTREAMING COURT?  

JIPL Online

While the option of moving in-person proceedings to a virtual format can be even more convenient to the conventional model, this “new normal” poses a new threat to privacy. [4] This blog proposes public policy arguments and concrete solutions to the laissez-faire approach to privacy in criminal court proceedings.

Privacy 52
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The Potential Risks of ChatGPT and Other Generative AI

LexBlog IP

Third, there are potential confidentiality issues to consider. Allowing a third party such as OpenAI to have access to otherwise protected information without a confidentiality agreement in place could constitute a “public disclosure” and risk the loss of protection for the disclosed information. [5]

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2022 Trade Secrets Webinar Series: Takeaways & Recordings

Trading Secrets

Protecting Confidential Information and Client Relationships in the Financial Services Industry. For those who missed any of the programs in this year’s series, recordings of all of our past webinars are available on the blog, or you may click on the link for each webinar below to view the recording. Anatomy of a Restrictive Covenant.

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Proctorio v Linkletter – Part 2

IPilogue

Proctorio did not dispute the fact that the ongoing debate of the impact of its software was of public interest; rather, it focused on Linkletter’s supposed malicious intent and sharing of confidential links.

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The Legal Boundary of Data Scraping in Light of Van Buren v. United States

JIPEL Copyright Blog

This blog will delve into the reasoning of Van Buren and predict the final decision of HiQ v. LinkedIn sent a C&D letter, asking HiQ to stop accessing and copying the data based on the User Agreement. LinkedIn , 938 F.3d 3d 985 (9th Cir. United States , 141 S. 1648 (2021). To begin, let’s recall the basic facts of HiQ v.

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2022 Trade Secrets Webinar Series: Takeaways & Recordings

LexBlog IP

Protecting Confidential Information and Client Relationships in the Financial Services Industry. For those who missed any of the programs in this year’s series, recordings of all of our past webinars are available on the blog, or you may click on the link for each webinar below to view the recording. View the Recording.