7th Annual ABA GPSolo National Solo & Small Firm Conference

The National Law Review is pleased to bring you information about the upcoming 7th Annual ABA GPSolo National Solo & Small Firm Conference:

When

October 11 – 13, 2012

Where

  • Westin Seattle
  • 1900 5th Av
  • Seattle, WA, 98101
  • United States of America

The Seventh Annual ABA GPSolo National Solo & Small Firm Conference is an educational and professional forum that will discuss legal developments in the law that impact solo, general practitioners, and small firms.  The conference is designed to engage and inform attorneys at all levels of practice.  Attendees will gain practical knowledge from an expert faculty comprised of well-known nationally acclaimed speakers.

This conference will cover a wide spectrum of topics including Practice Empowerment, Technology, and Basic Skills.

Practice Empowerment topics include:

  • Law firm and client development
  • Unbundling of legal services
  • Mastering the courtroom
  • Ethics 20/20 update
  • Estate planning for same sex couples
  • Persuasive legal writing

Technology programs will explore:

  • Using an iPad in litigation
  • The best apps and technology for your practice
  • Virtual offices and cloud computing
  • The ethics of legal technology
  • Building your practice through technology and advertising

The Basic Skills programs are a must for law students, new practitioners, and those looking to change or expand practice areas. Topics include:

  • Immigration
  • Criminal Law
  • Federal Estate Tax
  • Federal Rules of Evidence
  • Bankruptcy
  • Intellectual Property
  • Real Estate
  • Business Law

Apple Shareholders Request Information From Board on Privacy/Security Risk

The National Law Review recently published an article, Apple Shareholders Request Information From Board on Privacy/Security Risk, by Amy Malone of Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo, P.C.:

 

This week, Apple shareholders requested that its Board of Directors publish a report explaining how the board oversees privacy and data security risks.  The proposal, which is available here, was prompted by concern that recent issues such as the unauthorized access to iPhone users’ address books and the release of one million Unique Device IDs could place the company’s growth opportunities at risk.

The shareholder proposal references a recent study conducted by Carnegie Mellon University’s Cylab that made various recommendations to boards including, annual reviews of privacy and security programs to gage effectiveness and identify gaps and requiring regular privacy and security reports from management.   The interest in privacy and security as risk management issues at both the shareholder and board level is increasing. A recent study conducted by Corporate Board Member & FTI Consulting, Inc. surveyed 11,340 corporate directors and 1,957 general counsel regarding legal risks on their radar.  For the first time in the 12 years since the study has been conducted, data security was noted as the most prevalent concern among both directors (48 percent) and general counsel (55 percent). This level of concern has almost doubled in the last four years. For instance, in 2008, only 25 percent of directors and 23 percent of general counsel identified data security as an area of great concern.  Moreover, 33 percent of general counsel surveyed believe their board is not effective at managing cyber risk. This is one of the lowest ratings among the 13 risk management areas surveyed.

When asked whether their company had a plan in place to manage a data breach should one occur, only 42 percent of directors said their company had a formal Incident Response Plan. Twenty-seven percent responded that their company had no such plan and 31 percent were uncertain.  Despite acknowledging such unpreparedness, 77 percent of directors and general counsel still believe their company is prepared to handle a data breach. There is a serious concern, however, given the disconnect between having written response plans and the perception of preparedness.   Apple shareholders are recognizing that disconnect and apparently want to ensure that its Board has adequately addressed it.  The proposal will be voted on at Apple’s 2013 Annual Meeting.

©1994-2012 Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo, P.C.

Consumer Financial Services Basics – ABA Conference

The National Law Review is pleased to bring you information regarding the upcoming Consumer Financial Services Basics Conference sponsored by the ABA:

When

October 08 – 09, 2012

Where

American University

Washington College of Law

Washington, DC

Program Description

Facing the most comprehensive revision of federal consumer financial services (CFS) law in 75 years, even experienced consumer finance lawyers might feel it is time to get back in the classroom. This live meeting is designed to expose practitioners to key areas of consumer financial services law, whether you need a primer or a refresher.It is time to take a step back and think through some of these complex issues with a faculty that combines decades of practical experience with law school analysis. The classroom approach is used to review the background, assess the current policy factors, step into the shoes of regulators, and develop an approach that can be used to interpret and evaluate the scores of laws and regulations that affect your clients.Program FocusThis program will explain each of the major sources of regulation of consumer financial products in the context of the regulatory techniques and policies that are the common threads in a complex pattern, including:

  • Price regulation and federal preemption of state price limitations
  • Truth in lending and disclosure requirements
  • Marketing, advertising and unfair or deceptive conduct
  • Account servicing and collections
  • Regulating the “fairness” of financial institution conduct
  • Data security, fraud prevention and identity protection
  • Consumer reporting: FCRA & FACT Act
  • Fair lending and fair access to financial services
  • Remedies: regulators and private plaintiffs
  • Regulatory and legislative priorities for 2012 and beyond

Who Should Attend…The learning curve for private practitioners, in-house lawyers and government attorneys to understand the basics and changes to CFS law is very steep. This program is a great way to jump up that curve for:

  • Private practitioners with 1-10 years of experience who focus on CFS products or providers
  • In-house counsel at financial institutions and non-bank lenders
  • Government attorneys, in financial practices regulatory agencies
  • Compliance officers (who may be, but need not be, attorneys)

Grandparent Visitation Rights in Florida; Do They Exist?

The National Law Review recently featured an article, Grandparent Visitation Rights in Florida; Do They Exist?, written by Rebecca L. Palmer and Jenny Kim Sullivan of Lowndes, Drosdick, Doster, Kantor & Reed, P.A.:

 

As a result of Florida’s high population of elderly, and in turn, grandparents, the issue of grandparent visitation rights is often of interest to its residents.  Grandparents can have amazing influence on the children, be extremely helpful to the parents, and  be an extremely important part of the children in Florida’s lives.  That said, this doesn’t give grandparents enforceable legal rights.  The Florida Bar Journal recently published the following article which provides an excellent summary of the evolution of grandparent visitation rights and the current status of the law regarding same.

Read the Florida Bar Journal Article here.

© Lowndes, Drosdick, Doster, Kantor & Reed, PA

Class Actions National Institute October 24-25, 2012

The National Law Review is pleased to bring you information about the upcoming ABA Class Actions National Institute:

Attendees of the program will:

  • Gain practical knowledge on how judges view class-action lawsuits
  • Review class-action lawsuits in the Supreme Court
  • Learn trial techniques to sharpen their skills as class-action litigators

Who should attend?

  • Attorneys who litigate class-action lawsuits
  • In-house counsel and litigators interested in learning about the current state of class actions, including recent Supreme Court class-action decisions
  • Lawyers who litigate class-certification motions

When

October 24 – 25, 2012

Where

  • Sax Chicago
  • 333 N Dearborn St
  • Chicago, IL, 60654-4956
  • United States of America

Appellate Court Ruling Permits Continued NIH Funding of Embryonic Stem Cell Research

An article by Warren Woessner of Schwegman, Lundberg & Woessner, P.A. regarding Embryonic Stem Cell Research Funding recently appeared in The National Law Review:

On August 24th, the D.C. Cir. ruling dismissing the suit brought to block any federal funding of embryonic stem cell research was affirmed. Stem cell researchers can breathe a bit more easily, and keep the lights on in their labs – for the next few months at least.

© 2012 Schwegman, Lundberg & Woessner, P.A.

Securities Fraud National Institute – November 15-16, 2012

The National Law Review is pleased to bring you information about the upcoming Securities Fraud Conference by the ABA:

This national institute is an educational and professional forum to discuss the legal and ethical issues surrounding securities fraud.

Program highlights include:

  • Panel discussions with senior officials from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission  and U.S. Department of Justice
  • Updates since the passage of the Dodd-Frank Act
  • Breakout sessions focused on new financial reform legislation
  • Strategies for practitioners when representing clients under investigation, indicted and during appeals

When

November 15 – 16, 2012

Where

  • Westin New Orleans Canal Place
  • 100 Rue Iberville
  • New Orleans, LA, 70130-1106
  • United States of America

NLRB Mandates Wholesale Changes to Costco’s Social Media Policy

The National Law Review recently published an article by David M. Katz of Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo, P.C. regarding the NLRB and Costco:

 

There is no denying that the NLRB has recently devoted significant attention to employee’s use of social media.  Since August 2011, the Board’s Acting General Counsel, Lafe Solomon, issued three reports outlining his view of how the NLRA applies to employers’ social media policies and employees’ social media postings.  Click here and here for our commentary on those GC reports and for links to the reports themselves.  Until earlier this month, however, the Board itself had not weighed in on social media policies.

On September 7, the NLRB issued a Decision and Order (which you can access here) invalidating Costco Wholesale Corporation’s electronic posting rule, found in its employee handbook, that prohibited employees from making statements that “damage the Company, defame any individual or damage any person’s reputation.”  With little analysis, the Board found Costco’s policy overly broad, concluding that “the rule would reasonably tend to chill employees in the exercise of their [NLRA] Section 7 rights,” as employees would “reasonably construe the language to prohibit Section 7 activity.”  Section 7 of the NLRA provides to all employees—unionized and non-unionized—the right to engage in protected “concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection.”  Such protected concerted activity includes, for example, the right to protest an employer’s treatment of its employees or other working conditions.

The Costco decision adopts the legal reasoning set forth in the three GC reports, much of which is based upon traditional principles developed prior to the advent of social media as we know it.  And, similar to the three GC reports, the Board’s decision in Costco fails to articulate any social media-specific criteria to assist employers in crafting policies that do not inhibit employee rights under the NLRA,  although it does offer a couple of hints.

First, the Board distinguished prior cases addressing rules prohibiting employee “conduct that is malicious, abusive or unlawful,” including rules concerning employees’ “verbal abuse,” “profane language,” “harassment,” and “conduct which is injurious, offensive, threatening, intimidating, coercing, or interfering with” other employees. Criticizing Costco’s electronic posting rule, the Board stated that its social media policy “does not present accompanying language that would tend to restrict its application.”  If Costco had been more specific, then, by providing examples of prohibited conduct, its policy may have passed muster.  .  In doing so, employers should focus on the types of electronic postings that they truly seek to prohibit, such as defamatory, harassing or other egregious comments, or disclosure of employer trade secrets, proprietary information, or co-workers’ private information.

The second hint dropped by the Board in Costco is the suggestion that an employer’s inclusion of a savings clause or disclaimer may protect the employer from allegations that a social media policy inhibits employees’ protected concerted activities.  The Board concluded that Costco’s “broad” prohibition against making statements that “damage the Company” or “damage any person’s reputation” “clearly encompasses concerted communications,” but continued by noting that “there is nothing in the rule that even arguably suggests that protected communications are excluded from the broad parameters of the rule.”  This statement signals that the Board may have found Costco’s electronic posting rule acceptable had the rule included language specifically exempting protected concerted activities under the NLRA, which is in contrast to the GC’s position on such savings clauses.

As we noted in our previous postings on the subject, in light of the Board’s clear stance on social media policies (now confirmed in its Costco decision), and its application to both unionized and non-unionized employers, we recommend that all employers rigorously review their social media policies to ensure that they do not contain “broad” prohibitions that would not survive NLRB scrutiny.

©1994-2012 Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo, P.C.

ICC Rules of Arbitration – October 8-9, 2012

The National Law Review is pleased to bring you information about the upcoming ICC Training:

  • Location: ICC Headquarters, Paris
  • Date: 08/10/2012 – 09/10/2012
  • Event Type: Training
  • Language: French, English

After the success of the first round of trainings, ICC will be hosting another 2-day session on the 2012 ICC Rules of Arbitration in Paris in October.

Learning outcomes

  • Acquire theoretical and practical knowledge of the main changes in the 2012 ICC Rules of Arbitration on important topics such as Emergency Arbitrator; Case Management and Joinder, Multi-party/Multi-contract Arbitration and Consolidation
  • Study the 2012 ICC Rules of Arbitration in small working groups of about 10 participants applying various provisions to mock cases
  • Gaining valuable insights from some of the world’s leading experts in arbitration including persons involved in the drafting of the New ICC Rules of Arbitration

Who should attend?
Arbitrators, legal practitioners and in-house counsel who already have knowledge in arbitration and wish to know more about the 2012 ICC Rules of Arbitration.

New Rules Incorporating Service of Divorce Pleadings via E-Mail

The National Law Review recently published an article regarding Divorce Pleadings and E-mail written by Rebecca L. Palmer of Lowndes, Drosdick, Doster, Kantor & Reed, P.A.:

 

In today’s society with letter writing taking a back burner to emailing, text messaging, Facebook, Twitter as well as other social media within our social lives, it isn’t a far stretch for businesses to begin operating and communicating in a like manner.  More e-mails are being sent between attorney’s, instead of letters being drafted for each issue.  On June 21, 2012, however, the Supreme Court of Florida issued a Second Corrected Opinion which adopted a new Florida Rule of Judicial Administration 2.516 that in turn changes the way everyone operates in the day to day of the legal world. Essentially, this rule mandates that all documents which are required or permitted to be served on another party, are now to be served by e-mail unless this new rule provides otherwise.

Specifically as it relates to Family Law, all attorneys in Florida (unless excused by court order within that specific case) are mandated to abide by the new rule beginning September 1, 2012.  This rule applies to ongoing cases, as well as new cases.

A power point presentation, Service by E-Mail and E-Filingwas prepared by the Florida Bar and is currently accessible from their home page as well as the link herein.  This power point, a mere 40 pages in length, is a great tool to better understand the rules surrounding service of documents by e-mail.  This presentation pinpoints the requirements and changes from the e-mail address(es) that should be utilized to send your e-mails (pg. 13), to the time of service (pg. 25), along with the format of not only the e-mail and the subject line (pg. 28 & 32) as well as the requirements of how the document being served is attached (pg. 27 & 30).

While this rule mainly affects the attorneys procedures in providing documents to another party, there are additional provisions relating to self-represented litigants.  If self-represented litigants choose to participate in service by e-mail, they may do so even though it is not required.  Amazing how life keeps changing and how technology keeps shaping things.  Please be aware of this new rule as you proceed forward with your case!

© Lowndes, Drosdick, Doster, Kantor & Reed, PA