Right now, the biggest stories for lawyers: Regulators are redrawing the enforcement map in real time; AI hallucinations are becoming a malpractice problem for lawyers; Appellate courts are changing the rules lawyers rely on — and 2 more. Real stories, real sources, updated every few hours. Not generated guesses.
regulationhigh engagement
Regulators are redrawing the enforcement map in real time
A cluster of DOJ, SEC, CFPB, FTC, and related regulatory developments shows a fast-moving enforcement environment: new risk alerts, withdrawn guidance, settlement shifts, civil-rights delegation, and broader political pressure on agencies and their legal authority.
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AI hallucinations are becoming a malpractice problem for lawyers
Signals about judges sanctioning or disqualifying lawyers after AI-generated errors, plus commentary on malpractice risk and responsible AI use, cluster around the profession's growing exposure to hallucinated filings, verification duties, privilege concerns, and litigation fallout from ungrounded AI tools.
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Appellate courts are changing the rules lawyers rely on
Recent court decisions and high-profile Supreme Court coverage center on constitutional rights, administrative power, venue, class certification, privilege, and criminal procedure, showing how appellate rulings are altering litigation strategy and government authority.
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The Justice Department is at the center of political battles
These signals track the Trump-era Justice Department's expanding footprint in politically sensitive matters, including election records, habeas corpus talk, immigration, civil rights enforcement shifts, bar complaints, and challenges to state voting rules.
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Amazon faces a sweeping FTC fight over ad practices
Multiple items point to a major FTC push on Amazon's advertising and search auction practices, with possible civil penalties, alongside a broader consumer-protection swing reflected in settlement deadlines and related FTC action against other companies.
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