15 January 2016
Can Your Company's Website Lead To A Lawsuit?
re: business, public accommodation, Title III of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), services, physical locations, accessible, disabilities, Places of public accommodation, website, not all business websites need to comply with Title III rules, website must have a nexus to a physical brick-and-mortar site, public accommodation, retail store’s website, nexus, physical site, accessible website, website designers, WCAG 2.0 standards,
source: Can Your Company's Website Lead To A Lawsuit? | Fisher & Phillips LLP - JDSupra
expVC.com Domain Name News Archive
-
▼
2016
(225)
-
▼
January
(22)
- Trademarks, Websites, Metatags
- The Draft of the Know-How Directive
- Catching the Securitization Wave, Ten Key Things t...
- Using “Borrowed” Images on Your Blog or Website
- Cuba, Telecommunications, and Miami’s expanding Si...
- Trademarks: How to protect your brand legally
- NIST IoT Framework, Cybersecurity, Data Privacy
- Branding Checklist 2016
- Acquired Distinctiveness of Trademarks in the Unit...
- Fintech: Disruptive Force For Good
- Can Your Company's Website Lead To A Lawsuit?
- Uniform Rapid Suspension System, URS, ICANN New gT...
- Virtual Currencies, Community Banks and the Financ...
- USPTO Refusal to Register Disparaging Trademarks S...
- What China's Anti-Terrorism Law Means For ISPs and...
- Planning for an Urban World (video)
- Free Speech, First Amendment, Online Negativity: H...
- Third Party Works Made for Hire, Agreements, Copyr...
- ISPs, Copyright Trolls, DMCA Safe Harbor Protections
- Brand Valuation: Deciding What Your Brand Is Worth
- International Traffic in Arms Regulations, ITAR, P...
- The Invisible Networks Powering New York City (360...
-
▼
January
(22)