As a general matter, communications between attorneys and their clients are “privileged,” meaning they don’t have to be handed over to the other side in litigation relating to the matters covered in ...
Every day in corporate America, in-house and outside legal counsel attend meetings and correspond by email with their clients about both legal and business matters. Often it difficult to separate the ...
This article covers when attorney-client privilege in New York protects communications. Privilege generally lasts if disclosures are necessary for legal advice, such as to employees or professionals.
In In re Grand Jury, No. 21-1397 (U.S. May 2, 2022), the court is struggling as to the application of the attorney-client privilege when the communication contains both legal and nonlegal advice. As ...
The attorney-client privilege is so fragile that even disclosing protected communications to family members normally waives it. An Arizona appellate court recently took a forgiving view, but a ...
Camilo Artiga-Purcell flags up some of the cybersecurity, data protection and privilege risks associated with client-intake ...
Are you still using email to communicate with your clients about confidential matters? If so, you might want to rethink that approach. Because when it comes to secure communication, the tide is most ...
Key Takeaways Clear prompts create clearer and safer emails.Provide the AI with explicit and unmistakable compliance boundaries in your prompts.AI supports better communications at scale, leaving ...
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