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Raise the Board’s Financial IQ

.orgSource

That’s a question every association CEO should be able to answer. But a poor web design won’t get anyone on the bad side of the law whereas ignoring those important statements might. Board members are personally responsible for the organization’s compliance with all applicable laws and regulations. Is that even possible?

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5 things to know about philanthropy to HBCUs

Candid

That’s a trick question—it’s not a matter of dollars, but of cents. For a more “apples to apples” funding comparison, we also examined foundation funding to higher education institutions with similar attributes to HBCUs along five key dimensions: size, geographic region, institution type, locale, and specialization.

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Epic v. Apple turns into Windows v. Xbox

The Verge

That question was asked — implicitly and explicitly — over and over on the third day of Epic v. And today, Apple and Epic delved into one of the biggest questions of the trial: whether saying iOS violates antitrust law would make every major game console an unlawful monopoly too. Photo by Tom Warren / The Verge. Apple testimony.

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Oracle and Google’s Supreme Court showdown was a battle of metaphors

The Verge

“Prediction: The side that wins the metaphor battle will win the case,” tweeted University of Oklahoma College of Law professor Sarah Burstein. Oracle covers a complex question : what elements of computer code can be copyrighted, and if that code is covered by copyright, when it’s still legal to use pieces of it under fair use.

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Three questions that will decide Epic v. Apple

The Verge

But the filings also bring the case into focus, raising three questions that will be central to the trial over the coming months. The question is whether the court sees that as changing Apple’s business model or changing iOS itself. That’s a hard question, and it won’t be settled by a single ruling or a single case.

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As Yahoo leaves China, an accelerating stream of exits

TechCrunch

But the fact that it’s closing the curtains this month points at a blatant culprit: the Personal Information Protection Law of the People’s Republic of China (PIPL) , which came into effect on November 1.

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Amazon’s palm reading starts at the grocery store, but it could be so much bigger

The Verge

It’s much harder, by comparison, to snap a picture of someone’s hand and use that to spoof their vein patterns. Whether that’s a good idea or not is another question.”. Biometric information is protected in a way other data is not, by the EU’s GDPR regulations and by some state-level laws in the US. says Kaltheuner. (On

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