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Privacy, Cybersecurity, and the Legal Profession: What Lawyers Need to Know., 04/20/2023, On Demand More info »
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Privacy, Cybersecurity, and the Legal Profession: What Lawyers Need to Know.


Total Credits: 3 CLE, 3 Ethics

Average Rating:
   18
Categories:
Intellectual Property
Faculty:
Robert F Copple |  Laura Rogal |  Heather Lynn Buchta |  K Royal
Format:
Audio and Video
Co-Sponsored by:
The Intellectual Property, Business Law, ADR, & In-House Counsel Sections

Dates


Description

Privacy law is booming in the United States. We are bringing together a team of privacy and cybersecurity law professionals to provide an overview of the area focusing on the needs of lawyers as well as important new developments and changes in the law. Topics will include:

  • Privacy obligations as it applies to legal practice
  • New developments in the U.S. and Europe
  • Key compliance elements for data protection
  • Standard cybersecurity elements you must have in place
  • Privacy policy (notice) teardown 

Chair:

Robert F. Copple, Copple & Associates PC

Faculty:

Heather Buchta, Quarles & Brady LLP

Laura Rogal, Outlier

K Royal, JD, PhD., Crawford & Company

Handouts

Faculty

Robert F Copple Related Seminars and Products


, JD, PhD, Copple & Associates PC, is an arbitrator, mediator, investigator, and litigation strategy consultant. He helps to resolve disputes involving technology and science issues, including intellectual property, biotechnology, information technology, cybersecurity, telecommunications, high tech manufacturing, the environment, and health care. He was on the ground floor applying alternative dispute resolution (ADR) to the rapidly growing cannabis industry. Bob frequently lectures on law and technology issues both in law schools and professional organizations. He has authored more than 40 books and articles including the ABA Treatise, "Biotechnology and the Law" (Editor-in-Chief and coauthor). Bob is recognized as an organization leader, both statewide and nationally, serving as the chair of the board for the Arizona State University (ASU) Center for Law, Science, and Innovation, chair of the ADR Section of the Arizona State Bar Association, and member of the Intellectual Property Section Executive Council, among other positions. Bob worked as a litigator and regulatory negotiator for large law firms in Denver and Phoenix and was Senior Litigation Counsel for Motorola. In addition, he was a judicial law clerk for a Federal District judge and for a state supreme court chief justice. He received his BA, MA, and JD from the University of Nebraska, and his PhD from The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Bob was the executive editor of the Nebraska Law Review and is a Certified Information Privacy Professional (CIPP/US).


Laura Rogal Related Seminars and Products

Assistant General Counsel


Laura Rogal offers her clients a fresh perspective on not only the law, but also enhancing attorney-client relationship through straightforward communications and effective use of technology.Providing assistance to clients, whether a business or an individual, is something Laura prides herself in. She ensures that she gives her clients solutions that fit their needs and interests, not just lawyerly ideas that will cost the client money without providing them with the value they are looking for. Emerging technology is something Laura finds fascinating. Utilizing social media, she makes sure that she is up-to-date on the latest products and services that she can offer her clients. The Internet is where the vast majority of business takes place, either through email, the cloud, or e-commerce, and she strives to make sure that her clients are aware of their potential risks and rewards of using those platforms.


Heather Lynn Buchta Related Seminars and Products

Partner

Quarles & Brady LLP


As Phoenix Office Chair for the Intellectual Property Group and member of the Data Privacy & Security industry team at Quarles, Heather advises on information technology and data privacy with an additional focus on trademark and copyright matters. With clients in the hospitality, health care, manufacturing, consumer services and other industries, her experience focuses on software agreements (SaaS, downloadable and custom development), IT outsourcing, privacy programs and compliance, trademark prosecution and licensing, copyright prosecution and licensing, electronic contracting, and technology development deals. With more than 20 years working in the IT space, Heather has a deep knowledge of the industry, its standards and practices, and a clear sense of risks that are emerging as well as those no longer relevant.


K Royal Related Seminars and Products


K Royal, PhD, is an attorney and global compliance professional with 25 years of experience in the legal and health-related fields. K has a particular interest in technology along with its challenges and opportunities. She is certified through the IAPP as a Fellow of Information Privacy (FIP), Privacy Management (CIPM), and US and EU Privacy Law (CIPP/US, CIPP/E) and through ISACA as a data privacy solutions engineer (CDPSE). she obtained her law degree at the Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law at Arizona State University and her PhD in public affairs from the University of Texas at Dallas. She is currently in-house at Outschool, teaches privacy / data protection to law students, and serves on the board of several non-profit organizations.


Reviews

5
4
3
2
1

Overall:      4.2

Total Reviews: 18

Comments

Joshua G

"The speakers kept the material as interesting as Cyber Security can be. "

Amy M

"Need slides for all segments; 30 minutes of narrative without any visual reference is not reasonable. Also would like a less casual reference to age as the determinant of pw management; all panelists seem to echo that and it's wholly inappropriate and anyway inaccurate. Besides, the best practice standard is to frequently change all passwords and to lengthen and vary them to include caps, numbers and characters, which I did not capture from any of the presenters, making memory immaterial."

Nicole S

"Hoped there was more focus on the law instead of best practices in cybersecurity, which I already know from my own IT department."

Michael L

"What a waste of time. I learned nothing from this CLE. The panel did a lot of banter and story telling. The listed items were not covered in a logical way that was useful for anyone's practice. The listed items from the CLE: Privacy obligations as it applies to legal practice New developments in the U.S. and Europe Key compliance elements for data protection Standard cybersecurity elements you must have in place Privacy policy (notice) teardown "

John S

"Very well versed in the subject matter and used interesting slide to add to the presentation"

Mark H

"speakers very knowledgeable and kept it moving "

Karen D

"Really fantastic faculty panel "

John J

"Knowledgeable panel. Entertaining. Learned a lot."

Jeffrey S

"There was some good information about data security and privacy issues to be aware of and recommended practices. Some of the material was fairly basic and not all the stories tied closely to the topic. All the presenters were very knowledgeable."

Stephen M

"Seemed most fitting, all things considered."