Online Reviews, Twitter Threats, Organic Foods, Gift Cards. Sounds Like…
… Tuesday’s JD Supra Buzz. Here’s what we learned in law news today:

Customer review websites are on occasion prone to hyperbole (just ask the dirtiest hotel in the country) (Proskauer)
The Secret Service monitors Twitter for death threats against the president (How do we know? Because they’ve arrested people for doing it!) (Lawyers.com)
California’s Proposition 37 is turning organic friends into enemies, six weeks before it goes to the polls (Is That Legal?)
Moving your business to the cloud? Here are five things you need to know (Armstrong Teasdale)
A lawsuit filed against the issuer of a gift card whose card was allegedly difficult to zero out was dismissed by a federal court in New York (Loeb & Loeb)
There are websites that track data and security breaches at companies (Jaburg Wilk)
Businesses should welcome the CFPB’s new Company Portal (Loeb & Loeb)
Brazil is doing what it can to eliminate corruption ahead of the 2014 World Cup and the 2016 Olympics, but that may not be enough (Michael Volkov)
Thanks to a whistleblower, the SEC scored another victory against corporate fraud (Brooks Pierce)
The NLRB’s newest ruling on workplace social media policies looks very familiar (Small Business Support)
Wisconsin’s anti-union was struck down for violating the right to free speech (XpertHR)
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Catch the Buzz on Twitter: @JDSupraBuzz