On January 22, 2018, the United States Supreme Court denied a petition for writ of certiorari that requested review of the court’s May 2016 ruling in Spokeo, Inc. v. Robins. The 2016 Spokeo ruling concerned the types of injuries that are sufficient to confer standing to sue under Article III of the U.S. Constitution.
Read more »Data Privacy & Cybersecurity
February 2018
-
Supreme Court Won’t Reconsider Standing Principles from Spokeo Posted on: February 05, 2018 In: Data Privacy & Cybersecurity
Blog Search
Featured Posts
Blog Tags
accounting firms
alabama
arkansas
audit
audit logging
biometric data
bitcoin
blockchain
breach notification
business-to-business
california
canada
ccpa
client notification
colorado
commission
congress
consumer notification
consumer rights
coronavirus
covid-19
cpra
cryptocurrency
cybersecurity
cyber threat
data breach
data privacy
data privacy officer
data security
department of transportation
department of treasury
email
employment
equifax
eu
eu-u.s. privacy shield
european union
executive order
fbi
fcra
federal trade commission
financial services
fraud
gdpr
genetic information privacy act
hacking
healthcare
hhsocr
hipaa
holiday season
human resources
identity theft
illinois
incident response
information security
insider attacks
irs
legislation
legislative alert
malware
managed service providers
maritime cybersecurity
maryland
microsoft office 365
multi-factor authentication
multi-factor identification
nevada
new jersey
new mexico
new york
ninth circuit
nist security controls
opt out
personal data
personal information
phishing
pre-breach services
privacy notification
protected health information
ransomware
regulations
security vulnerabilities
social engineering
social media
ssn
statute
students
supreme court
tax returns
third party
utah
vermont
video-teleconferencing
virginia
virus
w2
washington
websites
workplace policy
zoom