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Illinois’ Damages Limitation for Biometric Privacy Violations Applies Retroactively

Hunton Andrews Kurth writes: On April 1, 2026, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit held that the 2024 amendment to Illinois’ Biometric Information Privacy Act (β€œBIPA”), limiting damages, applies retroactively to pending cases. The ruling inΒ Clay v. Union Pacific Railroad Company, Docket No. 25-2185 (7th Cir. 2026), represents a major win for...

Wisconsin employees may find it harder to sue employers over data breaches

Aaron Graf ofΒ  Amundsen Davis LLC writes: Under Wisconsin law, employees must first be the victim of identity theft or other concrete, imminent harm to have standing to sue employer for data breach. Mere risk of future data misuse is not enough to establish standing. […] A recent Wisconsin Court of Appeals decision, though unpublished,...

Judge prevents feds from going through reporter’s materials seized by FBI

Sydney Haulenbeek reports: Β A magistrate judge on Wednesday blocked the government from examining data that it seized from a Washington Post reporter last week. In a two-pageΒ order, Magistrate Judge William B. Porter granted the Post’s request for a standstill order, halting the federal government from reviewing any of the materials they seized from the property...

The Hidden Legal Minefield: Compliance Concerns with AI Smart Glasses, Part 4: Data Security, Breach Notification, and Third-Party AI Processing Risks

Joseph Lazzarotti of JacksonLewis writes: As we have discussed in prior posts, AI-enabled smart glasses are rapidly evolving from niche wearables into powerful tools with broad workplace appeal β€” but their innovative capabilities bring equally significant legal and privacy concerns. InΒ Part 1, we addressed compliance issues that arise when these wearables collect biometric information. InΒ Part...
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