Trending in Tech Today - May 2, 2012
A handful of well-read Tech updates and advisories caught our attention today, each with a different angle on related legal issues.
Besides jumping at the opportunity to write an alliterative title, here’s what we noticed in today’s JD Supra Law News mix:
- The Second Circuit Reverses Conviction of Computer Programmer and Holds that Theft of Intellectual Property Is Not Necessarily Criminal (Pullman & Comley)
- Courts Find Email Communications Result in Binding Contracts (MIller Canfield)
- Data Breaches: Will You Be Sued, And Can You Lower Risk? (Bryan Cave)
- Nothing Revealed on “Reveal Day”: New gTLD Application System Remains Suspended (Mintz Levin)
- Why you should .care that .com can be .anything (Greenberg Glusker)
- Georgia Legislature Passes Bill Banning Electronic Sweepstakes (Loeb & Loeb LLP)
- New Executive Order Imposes Sanctions on Technology Companies that Facilitate Human Rights Abuses in Iran and Syria (Foley Hoag)
Additional? @Tech_Law on Twitter
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