Unidentified companies in the lawsuit expressed concerns that information forwarded to the Texas attorney general’s office, such as business plans and negotiation conversations, might be seen by Google executives. Google’s counsel may be allowed to see some information deemed “confidential,” but they will be limited in their ability to advise on certain relevant topics for two years.
Estimated reading time: 0 minutes, 35 seconds
Judge in Google Antitrust Suit Aims to Protect Confidential Data of Unnamed Firms
Judge Sean Jordan of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, who is hearing an antitrust lawsuit against Google, has limited what the search engine’s lawyers will have access to as a way to ensure “confidential information used in an upcoming trial remains secure.” So reports Reuters.
Latest from Progressive Law Practice
- California Drivers No Longer Need To Answer Cop’s Question
- Iowa Ban On LGBTQ+ Books Largely Blocked Ahead Of Enactment
- Michael Cohen's Legal Defense Included Non-existent Cases Invented By Google Bard: Report
- Hershey Sued For False Advertising Over 'Cute' Holiday Candy
- Terms Of Bombshell Google Privacy Settlement Undisclosed
Most Read
-
-
Apr 07 2013
-
Written by PLP News
-
-
-
Mar 31 2013
-
Written by PLP News
-
-
-
Jan 26 2014
-
Written by PLP News
-
-
-
Jun 15 2014
-
Written by Tami Kamin Meyer
-