Search for: "In Re: Trade and Commerce Bank"
Results 301 - 320
of 458
Sort by Relevance
|
Sort by Date
9 Aug 2012, 11:46 am
” Aleynikov has acknowledged that he violated the bank’s confidentiality policy in downloading the source code from the company’s computers, but he has long asserted that what he’d done was not a criminal act. [read post]
4 Aug 2012, 12:01 am
Computers and the Internet, like all technologies, are a double-edged sword: whether they improve or degrade the human condition depends on who controls them and how they're used. [read post]
2 Aug 2012, 9:55 am
For a good summary of the pending In re Certain Rubber Resins trade secret case before the International Trade Commission, see Brian Vogel's article at Inside Counsel. [read post]
10 Jul 2012, 4:27 pm
Last spring, the Club for Growth, FreedomWorks and the lobbying arm of the Heritage Foundation all lined up against the Chamber of Commerce and pressed GOP congressmen to vote to kill the Export-Import Bank, which nonetheless was reauthorized by an overwhelming margin. [read post]
4 Jul 2012, 7:34 pm
In its recent decision in Sharbern Holding, the Supreme Court of Canada again re-affirmed the need for actual reliance, and clarified that this requirement cannot be waived by deemed reliance pursuant to a statute. [read post]
4 Jul 2012, 7:34 pm
In its recent decision in Sharbern Holding, the Supreme Court of Canada again re-affirmed the need for actual reliance, and clarified that this requirement cannot be waived by deemed reliance pursuant to a statute. [read post]
29 Jun 2012, 3:36 am
The standardization of the railroad gauge revolutionized the flow of commodities, the standardization of money revolutionized debt markets and simplified trade, and the standardization of credit networks has allowed for the purchase of goods using money deposited in a bank half a world away. [read post]
21 Jun 2012, 2:51 pm
So much commerce, banking, transportation and logistics depends on up-to-the-second cross-border data flow that no country, save for truly isolated regimes such as North Korea, can afford to cut themselves off the global Internet, even for one day. [read post]
18 Jun 2012, 11:47 am
Reproduced with permission from Electronic Commerce & Law Report, (June 13, 2012). [read post]
7 Jun 2012, 3:14 am
And needless to say, if that other party you need information on is an adversary (e.g. a competitor, or IP infringer), you’re out of luck. [read post]
17 May 2012, 8:59 pm
-> Guardian: US commerce department brings heavy tariffs against Chinese solar panels http://t.co/3WenhhdR -> FT: Trade war fears over US solar duties http://t.co/FZDWs3uI Why is every dispute a potential trade war? [read post]
14 May 2012, 8:24 am
Dozens of epidemiologic studies have shown that asbestos exposures of bystander trades, chrysotile factory workers, and other non-insulator, occupational exposures have lower risks of asbestos-related diseases. [read post]
11 May 2012, 8:20 am
Keeping an ethical wall between trades and analysts is fundamental – and, ever since Sarbanes-Oxley 2002, has been legally mandatory in the US, so if any of these traders were doing business in America, they’re looking at jail. [read post]
21 Apr 2012, 12:42 pm
Indeed, re-reading the First Circuit’s 2000 decision in Martin, one gets the sense that it, too, may already be out of date. [read post]
3 Apr 2012, 5:08 am
He pointed to the example of Barclays and Deutsche Bank re-shaping their US subsidiaries so they would no longer be classified as bank holding companies. [read post]
2 Apr 2012, 6:14 pm
And all parties have a chance to review and comment on the legal and factual bases for Commerce's calculations before they're published. [read post]
14 Mar 2012, 1:02 am
Host lunch for that committee at Commerce Club. [read post]
13 Mar 2012, 7:26 pm
The U.S. imported $399 billion in Chinese goods last year, according to the Commerce Department. [read post]
14 Feb 2012, 1:56 pm
In re Fresh and Process Potatoes Antitrust Litig., No. 4:10–MD–2186 (D. [read post]
14 Feb 2012, 11:28 am
Glass-Steagall was largely repealed, commercial banks and investment banks re-merged, and the industry became the same free-for-all mess it had been (only with a century of technological advancement behind it to make it all the more complex). [read post]