Source: https://blog.ceb.com/category/social-media-2/page/3/
Timestamp: 2020-05-28 13:26:01
Document Index: 187080112

Matched Legal Cases: ['art 2', 'art 2', 'art 2', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'art 1']

Social Media – Page 3 – CEBblog™
New Lawyers Practice of Law Social Media Starting a Law Practice
9 Comments on Blog, But Blog Ethically
The following is a guest blog post by April E. Frisby of Frisby Law. April is a corporate and securities transactional lawyer and an adjunct law professor at Whittier Law School.
Lawyers are often gun-shy when it comes to blogging, in part because of the ethical limits on advertising and solicitation by lawyers. But if you keep ethical considerations in mind, blogging can be a fun, cost-effective way to promote your practice.
Continue reading “Blog, But Blog Ethically”
Tags attorney advertising, attorneys, blawg, blogging, California Rules of Professional Conduct, law blog, legal blog, legal ethics, social media
Business Law Checklists Employment Law Legal Topics Social Media
Employers: Keep Clear of Social Media Landmines, Part 2
1 Comment on Employers: Keep Clear of Social Media Landmines, Part 2
Social networking and social media are increasingly incorporated into the workplace, but not without dangerous issues arising. Employers need to be ready to handle issues relating to social networking that occur during both on- and off-duty hours.
Continue reading “Employers: Keep Clear of Social Media Landmines, Part 2”
Tags employees, employers, employment policies, internet, social media, social media policy
Employers: Keep Clear of Social Media Landmines, Part 1
Post date January 23, 2013
7 Comments on Employers: Keep Clear of Social Media Landmines, Part 1
Whether employers like it or not, social networking and social media have found their way into most workplaces. Their appearance has meant many potential landmines for employers to navigate. Luckily, there are several relatively easy steps that every employer can take to decrease potential liability.
Continue reading “Employers: Keep Clear of Social Media Landmines, Part 1”
Tags employee handbook, employees, employers, employment policies, internet, passwords, privacy, social media, social media policy, workplace
Business Law Compliance/Best Practices Employment Law Legal Topics New Legal Developments Social Media
Update Your Social Media Policies
Post author By David Peyerwold, Esq.
Post date August 3, 2012
7 Comments on Update Your Social Media Policies
As the National Labor Relations Board continues to refine its position, here’s what you need to know to update your (or your client’s) social media policy.
Continue reading “Update Your Social Media Policies”
Tags employee handbook, employees, employers, employment policies, employment relationship, social media, social media policy
Constitutional Law Criminal Law Legal Topics New Legal Developments Social Media
Everything You Tweet Can Be Held Against You!
Post author By Jean Magistrale, Esq.
Post date July 23, 2012
7 Comments on Everything You Tweet Can Be Held Against You!
Judges throughout the country wrestle with the legal ramifications of evolving new technology, including personal information privacy in the use of social media. A New York criminal court recently put a big hole in any privacy expectation on tweets when it upheld a subpoena duces tecum and required Twitter to provide a defendant’s tweets to the district attorney.
Continue reading “Everything You Tweet Can Be Held Against You!”
Tags privacy, social media, subpena duces tecum, tweets, twitter
Business Law Civil Litigation Constitutional Law Legal Topics Social Media Tort Law
Cyber-Slamming
Post date November 16, 2011
5 Comments on Cyber-Slamming
The seemingly anonymous world of the Internet leads many of us to say things there that we would never say in person. But watch out, libel laws follow you into cyberspace.
Continue reading “Cyber-Slamming”
Tags blog, blogger, defamation, internet, law school, law student, libel, opinion
Civil Litigation Legal Topics Practice of Law Social Media
Service Via Social Networking?
Post date August 1, 2011
2 Comments on Service Via Social Networking?
Serving a complaint via Facebook may be in our future. As BusinessWeek.com reports, the practice of online legal service is spreading around the world as courts look for new ways to keep their dockets moving.
Continue reading “Service Via Social Networking?”
Tags electronic service, Facebook, Internet service, service of summons, social media
Business Law Employment Law Intellectual Property Legal Topics Social Media
Clashing Concepts: Trade Secrets and Social Media Networking
10 Comments on Clashing Concepts: Trade Secrets and Social Media Networking
A company’s trade secrets have always been an integral and valuable part of its business assets. Social media networking is fast becoming an integral and valuable part of business practice. By their very nature, these two concepts clash and create unprecedented risks of trade secret exposure and challenges for trade secret law.
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Tags social media, social networking, trade secrets
Business Law Legal Topics Social Media
3 Comments on When Is a Church Not a Church?
The issue of what constitutes a church for the IRS tax exemption purposes has recently been considered in a novel context: Is a congregation that holds only internet and radio worship services a church entitled to IRS tax benefits? The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit found that the “electronic ministry” did not meet the IRS’s definition of a church.
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Tags church, exempt, internet, IRS
Evidence Legal Topics Litigation Strategy Social Media
Facebook Postings as Evidence: They Are Not Just for Social Networking Anymore
9 Comments on Facebook Postings as Evidence: They Are Not Just for Social Networking Anymore
Yet another example of the law of unintended consequences at work: Those seemingly frivolous Facebook posts can be a prime source of evidence in a legal case. Facebook posts have a wide range of potential evidentiary value, from information on a person’s feelings, which may be particularly relevant in family law cases, to the use of geo-tagging for determining where a person was at a particular time.
Continue reading “Facebook Postings as Evidence: They Are Not Just for Social Networking Anymore”
Tags evidence, Facebook