October 2022 Privacy Law Top Blawgs
Provides global privacy and information security law updates and analysis. By Hunton & Williams.
Covers information security and privacy issues. By Foley Hoag LLP.
Provides commentary and news on developing legal issues in advertising, promotional marketing, Internet, and privacy law. By Olshan Frome Wolosky LLP.
Covers the relationship between art and law with a focus on intellectual property, nonprofit tax-exempt organizations, free speech, and contemporary art. By Sergio Muñoz Sarmiento.
Covers bloggers' rights, DMCA, DRM, intellectual property, privacy and security issues. From the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
Discusses issues of media law and responsibility with a special focus on libel and privacy law and the balance between the two.
Covers data security, HIPAA, identity theft and workplace privacy. By Jackson Lewis.
Covers consumer privacy, data security, HIPAA, financial privacy and EU privacy. By Hogan Lovells.
Covers global privacy and data security. By Covington & Burling LLP.
Features a discussion of medical privacy. By Jeffrey P. Drummond.
Updates on consumer protection trends and developments from the Advertising Law and Privacy Law practices of Kelley Drye
News and comments on Business Law. By Jordan M. Rand.
Covers global privacy, data protection and cybersecurity regulatory and litigation environment. By Norton Rose Fulbright.
Covers IP/IT law, with a strong focus on copyright and internet law. By Barry Sookman.
Discusses the legal hurdles facing startups and entrepreneurs including all intellectual property law topics. By Steven Buchwald.
Brings together concepts that cut across traditional intellectual property lines, addressing both evolving technologies and concerns about privacy and data security. By Porter Wright.
A Privacy Law and Security Law bLAWg, focusing on technological aspects of privacy, and looking at the effects of new regulations on technological advancements.
Spotlights developments and trends in technology, outsourcing, and other commercial transactions. By Morgan Lewis.
Covers social innovation, movements and change. By Professor Ray Brescia, the Harold R. Tyler Chair in Law and Technology at Albany Law School,