The Delaware Supreme Court, in Paramount Global v. Rhode Island Office of the Treasurer, affirmed that courts may consider post‑demand evidence and reliable anonymous news reports when assessing a stockholder’s credible‑basis claim under Section 220. The ruling emphasizes that such evidence is permissible only under exceptional circumstances and must not prejudice the corporation. The Court rejected a blanket prohibition against post‑demand material, while dissenting justices warned the decision could broaden Section 220 litigation. The decision clarifies the discretionary balance between protecting corporate interests and enabling shareholders to pursue genuine wrongdoing claims.

The Third Circuit affirmed summary judgment for a Pennsylvania packaging plant that fired a coworker who used the n‑word and later terminated a Black employee for exceeding attendance points. The court held that a single, non‑supervisory slur, followed by swift...

EU lawmakers confronted Chinese officials in Beijing over a wave of unsafe, non‑compliant products and limited market access for European firms, highlighting consumer safety and forced‑labour concerns. In February, China overtook Japan as Australia’s top source of imported vehicles, capturing...

President Trump attended a Supreme Court hearing on his attempt to end birthright citizenship, a move most analysts expect to be ruled unconstitutional. Meanwhile, defense firms Anduril and Palantir announced a partnership with the Department of War to build the...
Senegal’s telecom regulator, the Autorité de Régulation des Télécommunications et des Postes (ARTP), issued a formal warning to operators of illegal “community Wi‑Fi” services. The warning targets networks that frequently rely on Starlink satellite antennas to provide unauthorised broadband. ARTP...

Dunamu and Naver Financial have pushed back their share‑exchange deadline from June to September after the Korea Fair Trade Commission extended its review. A Financial Supervisory Service correction order on April 3 added further regulatory uncertainty. The merger, valued at roughly...
More than a year into Trump’s second term, federal courts have become the primary battleground over his higher‑education agenda. Inside Higher Ed’s analysis of 64 lawsuits shows plaintiffs winning 33 cases while the administration leads in only 17, with 14...

Thomson Reuters announced a strategic partnership with Hotshot to embed its AI‑driven research tools into law school curricula, giving students hands‑on experience with commercial legal tech. Clio introduced new agentic features to its Clio Work platform, automating routine tasks such...

FutureLaw 2026 will convene 500 legal‑tech practitioners, technologists, and policymakers in Tallinn on May 14‑15, focusing on operational AI integration, machine‑readable legal workflows, and cross‑border governance. The two‑day program includes 25 hours of sessions, eight workshops, and discussions on the...

This week saw a flurry of federal actions spanning environmental, election and consumer‑protection policy. The Endangered Species Committee granted Gulf of Mexico oil producers an exemption from the Endangered Species Act, while President Trump issued an executive order tightening absentee‑ballot...

New York’s Stop Highway Community Harm Act would prohibit widening or adding lanes to highways within 200 feet of public housing and in ZIP codes where asthma‑related emergency visits exceed 70 per 10,000 residents. The legislation targets projects such as...
A new EU and Norwegian regulation bans the photoinitiator trimethylbenzoyl diphenylphosphine oxide (TPO) in nail‑polish products sold to professional salons. Health officials warn that TPO can increase cancer risk, damage DNA and impair fertility. The rule targets businesses, not retail...
President Donald Trump’s early winning streak at the Supreme Court is waning as recent rulings have turned against his policy agenda. Simultaneously, he dismissed Attorney General Pam Bondi, installing deputy Todd Blanche as acting head of the Justice Department. The...

LexBlog is launching the LexBlog Library, a structured, citable repository of over two million pieces of legal practitioner publishing. The platform treats practitioner insights as secondary law, positioning them alongside traditional scholarly sources for citation by judges, researchers, and AI...

Law firm Higbee & Associates sued May First Movement Technology, alleging infringement of an AFP photograph that the nonprofit never posted. The image had been uploaded years earlier by a member organization, and May First promptly removed it after being...
The Department of Justice’s cyber fraud initiative has accelerated, with nine False Claims Act settlements in FY 2025 totaling more than $52 million—a three‑fold increase over the prior two years. Enforcement targets misrepresentations of cybersecurity compliance rather than actual data breaches, implicating...

Litigation technology company AI.Law has launched the second version of its AI‑driven platform, AI.Law v2. The upgraded solution expands beyond document management to include case analysis, automated drafting, and new predictive analytics features. It also offers native integrations with leading...

The rise of autonomous trucking technology is reshaping liability law, moving responsibility from solely the driver to a broader set of parties including OEMs, software developers, and carriers. As Level 4 trucks automate driving functions, courts are likely to see more...
Intel announced the appointment of Aparna Bawa as Executive Vice President and Chief Legal & People Officer, reporting directly to CEO Lip‑Bu Tan. Bawa will oversee the company’s global legal, ethics, compliance, people, and culture organizations as Intel accelerates its...

Legal scholar Orin S. Kerr submitted an amicus brief in the Supreme Court’s United States v. Chatrie, a case that tests the Fourth Amendment’s reach over geofence warrants. The brief contends that a user’s Google Location History does not qualify...

The U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) released a concise five‑page guidance outlining how companies can detect sham transactions used to conceal sanctioned individuals. The document provides concrete examples—such as jets transferred to trusts, funds moved to children’s...

Legal departments are rapidly integrating AI tools into everyday workflows, but recent concerns highlight that any mishandling of privileged information, bias, regulated data exposure, or evidentiary integrity ultimately falls on the organization. General counsel, managing partners, CIOs, and legal operations...

Linked (cloud) attachments remain a critical e‑discovery blind spot, despite tools that can collect and search them. Recent developments—such as the Carvana court‑ordered capability test, the Sedona Conference’s 2025 commentary, and the proposed Reconstruction‑Grade eDiscovery (RG) standard—reinforce the duty to...

Solve Intelligence announced the acquisition of AI‑driven patent‑litigation startup Palito.ai and the opening of a new office in Munich. The deal adds Palito.ai’s automated validity analysis and case‑law research tools to Solve Intelligence’s existing platform. The Munich location signals a...

U.S. appellate courts are now reviewing a wave of district‑court sanctions issued against attorneys who used generative AI to insert fabricated citations in legal briefs. Judges have imposed monetary penalties and, in some cases, adverse rulings for failing to verify...
Washington’s Driver Privacy Act, which took effect this week, bars law‑enforcement use of automated license‑plate readers (ALPR) near schools, courts, food banks, places of worship, and reproductive or gender‑affirming health facilities. Though marketed as an immigration‑protection measure, the law effectively...
The FTC and DOJ have launched a joint public inquiry to reconsider antitrust guidance for competitor collaborations, with a focus on artificial‑intelligence markets. They argue that current rules risk over‑deterring joint research, infrastructure projects, standards work and privacy‑enhancing initiatives that...

A federal judge in Illinois dismissed Stephanie Foster’s class‑action lawsuit against Nestlé, ruling that the phrase “100% real chocolate” on a bag of chocolate chips does not mislead consumers. The court relied on the FDA’s definition, which permits emulsifiers like...

Construction litigation increasingly relies on e‑discovery, yet firms face five distinct hurdles: massive, heterogeneous data volumes; fragmented custodians across subcontractors; complex technical drawings and BIM files; metadata erosion; and escalating costs. The article outlines practical fixes such as AI‑driven document...

Physical asset tracking remains a critical component of eDiscovery preservation, even as organizations migrate data to the cloud. S2|DATA’s ChainLogix platform provides a barcode‑based system that assigns up to 200 customizable fields per device, delivering a defensible chain of custody...

Lawfare will host its monthly “Ask Us Anything” webinar on April 22 at 12 pm ET, featuring Editor‑in‑Chief Benjamin Wittes alongside senior editors Kate Klonick and Kevin Frazier and contributor Renée DiResta. The session will focus on tech policy and law, covering AI development,...

A Maryland district court dismissed Supernus Pharmaceuticals' attempt to secure D&O insurance coverage for an antitrust lawsuit, holding the claim did not qualify as a “Securities Claim” under the policy. The court focused on the policy’s definition, which requires the...

The article warns legal teams that version uncertainty in Microsoft’s Cloud Attachments can undermine document production reliability. It revisits earlier posts from 2024, highlighting how linked attachments often reference outdated file versions when shared across platforms. The author outlines practical...

Legal tech firm 8am, parent of LawPay and MyCase, has become the Tampa Bay Buccaneers' Official Professional Services Partner, securing naming rights to a 10,000‑square‑foot lounge now called the 8am Club at Raymond James Stadium. This follows a wave of high‑profile...

The National Football League announced 8am as its new official professional services partner, marking the league’s first legal‑tech sponsor. 8am, formerly known as AffiniPay, brings a suite of payment processing, practice‑management, and compliance tools—including LawPay, MyCase, and CasePeer—to the NFL’s...

AXA UK & Ireland announced Caroline Riddy as its new General Counsel, effective 7 April 2026, succeeding Emily Coupland after a 24‑year tenure. Riddy brings over two decades of legal and company secretariat experience, most recently overseeing governance for more...
Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei warned that half of entry‑level lawyers, consultants and finance professionals could disappear within five years as AI matures. The article counters that while large language models can draft memos and build models, liability and professional judgment...
![[Guest Post] The WTO's Tale of Two Dispute Systems](/cdn-cgi/image/width=1200,quality=75,format=auto,fit=cover/https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi7d71XcfP8iFrV-RMw2J8MiC0Vs2mxwAOaiPUF9QJKj5LgZCzGYl2eNGMiUPOB1KRT9aZcMspFCOiXu3LKymeJvd8FzpherV8q5-F6Uwc4TYEqCdWLhdc-pxiUZwTFIGhZVHQDBGrgcRbFToK8vpsIQV_X9yACN_h0opOhq2Kbty1maO5rMR0dwA/s72-c/A%20cat%20outside%20the%20World%20Trade%20Organization%20on%20a%20su.png)
The WTO’s 14th Ministerial Conference in Yaoundé downplayed dispute‑settlement reform, leaving the Multi‑Party Interim Appeal Arbitration Arrangement (MPIA) as the de‑facto appellate mechanism. Since the Appellate Body stalled in 2019, the MPIA has delivered two arbitration awards, including a landmark...

Universal Migrator announced a suite of new data‑migration scripts that move financial and case‑management data from Quickbooks, LexiPi, and INS Zoom into leading practice‑management platforms such as Clio, MyCase, Litify and Lawmatics. The scripts expand the company’s library to over 144...

The FTC and DOJ are overhauling antitrust review in healthcare, shifting focus from traditional market‑share and price analysis to how vertically integrated systems control patient flow. Updated Hart‑Scott‑Rodino filing rules now demand explanations of ecosystem design, strategic intent, and internal...
Harvey’s AI agents and Shared Spaces were highlighted in a Legal IT Insider webinar, showcasing how the platform’s agentic workflows can automate complex, multi‑step legal processes. Launched a year ago, the agents can plan, adapt, and interact with users, while...
A flight attendant for Alaska Airlines is suing Stumptown Coffee after a coffee bag exploded in the galley, causing severe, permanent burns. The incident is one of at least ten similar injuries reported since Stumptown became the carrier’s exclusive in‑flight...

Alfonso Wilson, CEO of Oil Technologies Consortium, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to violate the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. He admitted orchestrating bribes to a senior PEMEX official to secure a $540 million equipment contract for Texas‑based Drillmec in December 2021....

On April 1, 2026, DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin eliminated the $100,000 contract‑review threshold imposed by his predecessor Kristi Noem, delegating authority to component heads and retaining Secretary sign‑off only for contracts above $25 million. The change affects roughly 31 percent of DHS...

Lawfront has acquired Reading‑based firm Field Seymour Parkes, adding a practice with roughly $19 million in annual revenue and 85 qualified lawyers. The deal expands Lawfront’s footprint into the Thames Valley and brings a firm that has delivered about 9% compound...

The IRS issued Notice 2026‑24, automatically waiving the Section 6654 estimated‑tax penalty for qualifying farmers who file their 2025 returns by March 1 and pay the full liability by April 15, 2026. The relief addresses delays caused by the late finalization of Form 8995 and...
Board overload is emerging as a critical governance challenge as regulators increasingly require boards to oversee a growing array of issues—from financial reporting and anti‑money‑laundering to cyber security and climate risk. Despite these expanding mandates, board size and meeting frequency...
Norm has assembled 50 attorneys from elite firms to write code for its AI-driven legal platform, branding them as "Legal Engineers." These lawyers, many with no prior programming experience, undergo a rigorous certification to embed deep legal expertise into AI...

Legora has reached $100 million in annual recurring revenue within 18 months of its general‑availability launch, serving over 1,000 customers in 50 markets. The legal AI platform has shifted from single‑task tools to multi‑step, agentic workflows, handling large‑scale document reviews and...
On March 11‑12, 2026 the U.S. Trade Representative announced 76 new Section 301 investigations, targeting 16 economies for alleged structural excess capacity and 60 economies for alleged forced‑labor violations. The USTR has set an April 15, 2026 deadline for written comments and will...