Jim Butler, Bob Braun and Guy Maisnik’s article, “Condo hotel revolution and resurgence: Why developers are using ‘new breed’ of condo hotels for financing,” was published by Jim Butler’s Hotel Law Blog, and was picked up by Hotel Online.
Robert Braun’s article, “Lenders Want Comfort Letters – Comfort for Whom?” regarding hotel franchise agreements, was published by Law360.
Bob Braun’s blog article, “Comfort Letters – Comfort for Whom?” was published by Jim Butler’s Hotel Law Blog, and was picked up by ehotelier.com.
Bob Braun’s article, “Comfort Letters – Comfort for Whom?” was published by Jim Butler’s Hotel Law Blog, and was picked up by Hotel Online and Hospitality Net.
Bob Braun’s article titled, “Hotel Franchise Agreements: 8 Things to Negotiate in Your Next Franchise Agreement,” was published by Jim Butler’s Hotel Law Blog, and was picked up by Hotel Online, Hospitality Net, ehotelier.com, Hotel News Resource and Hospitality Financial & Technology Professionals.
Bob Braun’s article, “Let’s Clear the Air about Hotel Management Agreements,” was published by Jim Butler’s Hotel Law Blog, and was picked up by Hotel Online, Hospitality Net and ehotelier.com.
Effective January 1, 2014, amendments to the California Online Privacy Protection Act (“CalOPPA”) require all commercial websites and online services that collect personally identifiable information (“PII”) to include additional disclosures in their privacy statements: how the operator responds to browser “Do Not Track” signals or other similar mechanisms; and whether other parties may collect PII […]
Bob Braun’s article, “The Target and Neiman Marcus breaches: What hoteliers need to know,” was published by Jim Butler’s Hotel Law Blog, and was picked up by Hotel Online, Hospitality Net, ehotelier.com and Hotel News Resource.
Bob Braun, Michael Gold and Dan Sedor authored an article in Aspatore’s Inside the Minds series, “Privacy and Data Security Issues in the U.S., E.U. and Beyond,” published in 2013.
On September 26, 2013, the California Secretary of State allowed proponents of a new ballot proposition to collect signatures for the “Personal Privacy Protection Act.” The Act, if approved, would radically change the privacy landscape in California by adding new provisions to the California Constitution. Most importantly, the Act (1) requires all “legal persons” that […]