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Alaina Lancaster, based in San Francisco, covers disruptive trends and technologies shaping the future of law. She authors the weekly legal futurist newsletter What's Next. Contact her at [email protected]. On Twitter: @a_lancaster3
Law enforcement officials and privacy experts dissect the question of who may be legally at fault for cybersecurity breaches during the Capitol siege.
Uber provided drivers with misleading facts about the measure that would exempt gig companies from a test reclassifying workers as employees.
In a potentially ominous note for gig companies, Calif. officials have vowed to ensure gig workers are properly classified under state law.
Coronavirus hasn't dismantled privacy protections in GDPR, CCPA and other privacy laws, yet.
The companies were slapped with a class-action lawsuit after a data breach exposed the information of an estimated 10,000 customers.
Despite Ring's suite of security offerings, the federal complaint says it failed to set up "even basic cybersecurity protections."
According to the complaint, the partnership between United and the insurers means customers pay more than they should.
White and Asian job seekers, represented by Google applicant Michael Burns, also say they face race-based discrimination.