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  HOME » Articles » Legal » Cyber Law    RSS Advantages | Author TOS | Publisher TOS | Editorial Guidlines |  RSS Feeds 
Subprime Mortgage Loan Fraud - How E-Discovery Can Uncover The Truth

Subprime mortgage lenders who have committed fraud, or acted as a predatory lender, to home owners should know that much like Enron, they will have their day in court.

Jason Perry

 

 
Protecting Your Website Legally From the Music Industry

Explains to website owners the potential risk of putting music on a website without the proper licensing.

Mike Bradbury

 

 
Should Lawyers use Metadata?

The question clearly beckons, should lawyers review metadata in documents? Is reviewing this data ethical, when the author of such data likely had no idea they were creating it? Metadata by its definition is simply, data about data. It can contain all sort of identifying information. One of the easiest ways for metadata to be left in a document is for the comments section to leave the comments feature turned on. Similarly, if you leave track changes turned on, the receiving...

Michael A. Goldstein

 

 
Even Courts Rely on Mapquest

Unchallenged Mapquest results are routinely considered and relied upon by American courts.

Jonathan Frieden

 

 
Introduction To Computer Forensics

A brief introduction to Computer Forensics and how why your company may require the services of a Computer Forensics Investigator.

Jason Perry

 

 
The CRTC & the Internet - Forbidden Domain

So, the question is: should the CRTC regulate the internet? Perhaps the question should be directed thusly: can the CRTC regulate the internet? To the former question, the answer is "probably not." To the latter, the response is "absolutely not."

Jeffrey Saunders

 

 
What is Digital Rights Management (DRM)?

DRM stands for Digital Rights Management, or as some people call it, Digital Restrictions Management. Put simply, DRM consists of various restrictions applied in music or video files, so their use (such as playback) can be controlled by a third party, usually the company holding the copyright for a song or movie.

J. Roberts

 

 
The EU Takes Action to Protect Its E-communications Network From Disaster Damage

The European Union is taking contingency measures to prevent disruptions of Internet service, such as the failures taking place in Asia after a major earthquake hit the coast of Taiwan in December 2006. To prevent a similar situation, the European Union has sought expert feedback on how to ensure European electronic networks are protected and resilient against terrorist attacks and natural disasters.

Maricelle Ruiz

 

 
Viacom Sues Google

Viacom, a media company, has recently sued Google for $1 billion, for the copyright infringement on the website YouTube. More lawsuits are predicted to come from the company Viacom, who claims the website YouTube has infringed on its copyrights. It is a battle of two giants and the outcome is less than certain.

Eric Hartwell

 

 
What Every Employee Should Know About Non-Compete-Non-Solicitation Contracts

A non-compete contract is an agreement signed by an employee where he or she agrees that they will not engage in certain employment within a certain geographic area for a certain period of time after they quit or are fired. Likewise, a non-solicitation contract binds the employee not to contact the employer's customers or remaining employees under the same conditions.

Enrico Schaefer

 

 
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