Getting Along: How the generations are working together

October 31, 2008

Maybe you’ve seen this scenario in the workplace (maybe yours):
The new college graduate has joined the company at full steam, acting as if she’s entitled to choose her own hours and take on the full responsibility of a project. Even in an entry-level position, she won’t hesitate to inflict her opinion on others and she […]

Anti-spam law struck for being ‘overbroad’

October 31, 2008

It’s unusual for the Supreme Court of Virginia to take a second look at a decided case.
It’s highly unusual for the high court to switch from a 4-3 affirmance to a unanimous reversal of a criminal conviction. The high-profile subject is spammer Jeremy Jaynes, and the reversal stemmed from a second look at a recent […]

How to conduct your own technology audit

October 31, 2008

Technology gurus have spent years marketing, selling, and convincing us to add more and more technological tools to our lives. Many of us are old enough to remember that when we began our law practices, we prepared documents with typewriters and dictated on to tape. When we went home, we listened to music on vinyl […]

How to manage the tsunami of spam

September 10, 2008

By Bruce Dorner
Does your work day begin with a thousand taps of the “Delete” key to remove the flood of spam that invades your inbox? Are you getting worn down trying to sort the important e-mails from the torrent of junk? Are you ready to delegate e-mail triage to a staff person? Then let’s […]

Spam: The Next Generation

September 10, 2008

Spam, i.e., unwanted e-mail, won’t go away. At least the spammers are getting funnier.
Check out your spam filter some time to see what’s been blocked. Use the same care and caution you’d use when opening a full trash can that’s been sitting out in the summer sun a few days. You can’t be sure what’s […]

Planning for changes in technology

June 27, 2008

Is your business making a move or contemplating a telecommunications switch (or a switch in any other technology, for that matter)?
Here’s a checklist of things to consider:
• Plan ahead — way ahead.
If a long distance or wireless carrier change is even contemplated, look at the existing contract and know when it expires. Then back up […]

How your business can combat spam

June 27, 2008

There are many common security measures that should be in place on your company’s e-mail servers, but you can help yourself in the fight against “spam” – unwanted e-mail messages and solicitations.
You really need only to be aware of what you are doing online, including:  
1. Do not provide your e-mail address to pop-open browser windows […]

Phishing, pharming and other means of ID theft

June 13, 2008

The statistics on identity theft are staggering. Recent surveys estimate that on average, there are between 9 million and 10 million victims of identity theft each year. On average, identity theft costs each victim $6,383 and 600 hours restoring his or her name and credit.
It’s so prevalent that TV commercials now joke about it.
For those […]

A long trip for a short meeting

May 14, 2008

People who filed for bankruptcy in the Danville area and far Southwest Virginia now have to travel farther – as much as 86 miles farther – to attend short and simple trustees’ meetings. In Danville, the reason appears to be a battle between the General Services Administration, which manages office space, and the Department of […]

Moral: Don’t write that stuff on the company computer

May 14, 2008

Here’s a nugget for HR people from Banks v. Mario Industries of Virginia Inc., decided last year by the Supreme Court of Virginia: Disclaimers about no expectation of privacy in the use of company computers will be upheld, and attorney-client privilege is no help to an ex-employee on the point.
The Banks case was a business-tort […]

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