Showing 31 posts in Privacy.
May 10, 2011
DOJ Urges U.S. Supreme Court To Approve Warrantless GPS Tracking
The Fourth Amendment protects an individual from unreasonable searches and seizures. As it stands today, unless an individual has a reasonable expectation of privacy, local and federal law enforcement are not required to obtain a warrant prior to conducting a search. Does a person reasonably expect that law enforcement will attach a GPS tracking device to a vehicle to clandestinely monitor that person’s every movement? The Department of Justice (DOJ) thinks so. Read More ›
Categories: Privacy
Categories
- Trade Secrets
- Employee Benefits
- Sales Tax
- Crowdfunding
- Patents
- Licensing
- Defamation
- Estate Planning
- Lawsuit
- Domain Name Registration
- Cybersecurity
- Tax
- Hospitals
- Corporate Transparency Act (CTA)
- Mergers & Acquisitions
- Labor Relations
- Employment
- IT Contracts
- Social Media
- Billing/Payment
- HIPAA
- Tax Disputes
- Entity Selection, Organization & Planning
- Sales/Disputes
- Did you Know?
- Elder Law
- Liability
- Fraud & Abuse
- Distribution
- Cloud Computing
- Privacy
- Retirement
- Hospice
- Legislative Updates
- Personal Publicity Rights
- Compliance
- Copyright
- Department of Labor
- News
- Entity Planning
- Startup
- Criminal
- Venture Capital/Funding
- Artificial Intelligence (AI)
- Contracts
- Technology
- Financing
- Electronic Health Records
- Trademarks
- Digital Assets
- National Labor Relations Board
- Inspirational
- Intellectual Property
- Insurance
- Alerts and Updates
- E-Commerce
- Regulations
- Chapter 11