JD Supra Morning Brief: California Sues Delta, North Dakota Needs Power, Chicago Reports Pay-Day Scams
Coffee? Tea? JD Supra Morning Brief?
There’s a new breed of juror out there, one with mobile access to the Internet (Levick)
Do you know who owns your company’s social media? You’d better (Pullman & Comley)
She warned them. She gave them time to act. And now, California Attorney General Kamala Harris is suing Delta Airlines for not including a privacy policy with its mobile app (Ifrah Law)
The government may be raking it in from False Claims Act settlements, but they don’t win every time (Ober | Kaler)
“Innocence of Muslims” copyright claim dismissed; YouTube not required to take down the film (Foley Hoag)
Study shows additional LNG exports would bring “net economic benefits” to the country. So what’s holding up the licenses? (Bracewell & Giuliani)
Chicago will be the first city in the country to directly report alleged violations of federal consumer financial protection laws to the CFPB (Foley & Lardner) (Ballard Spahr)
Q: What’s the common (and essential) element to all Ponzi schemes? A: Greed (Diaz Reus)
How is the Nuclear Regulatory Commission responding to the 2011 Fukushima disaster? (Burr & Forman)
There’s significant irony here: North Dakota needs an additional 2000 MW of electricity to power the Bakken shale oil and gas boom (Leonard, Street and Deinard)
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