Applications are now open for ZwillGen’s 2027–2028 Fellowship Program.
Join a team helping clients navigate some of the most important legal challenges shaping technology, privacy, AI, and cybersecurity.
For lawyers interested in what’s next.
https://t.co/xqH3EIW3hR
In a recent New York Law Journal article, Rachel Miller explains how artificial intelligence has made vendor contract negotiations more complex, time-consuming, and legally demanding than ever before.
https://t.co/WEIJ8l7VVg
The technologies shaping the future of business continue to evolve rapidly—and so do the legal and regulatory challenges surrounding them. Helping our clients navigate these risks remains at the core of what we do.
We’re proud to once again be recognized in Chambers USA for our work in Privacy & Data Security and Gaming & Licensing.
This year marks ZwillGen’s 16th consecutive year of recognition in Chambers’ nationwide Privacy & Data Security rankings.
https://t.co/bwbd6IzpqB
On June 2, 2026, the White House issued an Executive Order: Promoting Advanced Artificial Intelligence Innovation and Security, that pairs a strong federal cybersecurity push with a new voluntary pre-release testing process for the most capable AI models.
Read more on LinkedIn: https://t.co/D6wmoaA24Y
Rather than waiting for AI-specific legislation, plaintiffs are trying to fit AI-related conduct into existing statutes and receiving mixed results from courts:
#AILitigation#DataPrivacy#Litigation#ArtificialIntelligence
https://t.co/iiuyx4h9fg
Your CMP is supposed to protect you. But when deployed incorrectly, it becomes a plaintiff's Exhibit A. The 10 patterns behind the current wave of cookie litigation:
#CIPA#Litigation#CookieCompliance#ConsentManagement#CMP
https://t.co/dBMfIaIIn8
The ICO’s 2026 guidance makes clear that UK tracking compliance reaches well beyond traditional cookies, with regulators focusing on a broader range of storage and access technologies: #DataPrivacy#UK#CookieCompliance#AdTech
https://t.co/i3F6RRImbQ
The FTC announced it has begun enforcing the TAKE IT DOWN Act (TIDA) and launched a new portal for complaints regarding platforms’ compliance with requests to remove nonconsensual intimate imagery. https://t.co/c0B8mi9I7E
Rachel Miller explains how the surge in AI investment is forcing technology and data companies to rethink their commercial contracts in a recent publication.
#Contracts#ArtificialIntelligence#AI
https://t.co/YAMiLUSPUz
Shutterstock will pay $35 million to settle FTC allegations that the company charged consumers without informed consent and made subscription cancellations unnecessarily difficult.
The proposed order also includes requirements related to disclosures, consent, and cancellation processes.
https://t.co/outAqPhyzN
The EU’s age-verification app may be technically ready, but the compliance picture for online providers in Europe is anything but settled. We examine why the new tool is only part of the story:
#DigitalServicesAct#AgeVerification#OnlineSafety#EU
https://t.co/IxzQElEZcT
California AG Rob Bonta’s office described the matter as the largest CCPA penalty in California history to date and the first CCPA enforcement action centered on data minimization.
https://t.co/byepOYp9hk
GM has agreed to pay $12.75M to settle allegations that it violated the CCPA and California’s Unfair Competition Law through the sale of Californians’ location and driving data to data brokers.
The settlement also includes restrictions on GM’s future use and sale of consumer driving data.
https://t.co/DTKtgcxYwR
Interesting reporting from @WIRED on “vibe-coded” applications that may have exposed sensitive corporate and personal data on the open web.
https://t.co/wgCqol3QUE
As AI tools make it easier than ever to spin up apps and internal tools, it’s worth remembering that speed and accessibility don’t replace security, privacy, or governance review.
The UK’s Online Safety Act has entered a new phase, with in-scope user-to-user services now required to remove and report detected child exploitation content to the UK’s NCA or equivalent foreign agency. #UKCompliance#ChildrensPrivacy#OnlineSafety
https://t.co/EAVHqnIake
The FTC announced a settlement with Kochava and its subsidiary prohibiting the sale, sharing, or disclosure of sensitive location data without consent, following allegations the companies sold data that could be used to trace individuals’ movements.
https://t.co/9sckhWAxfC