Lieff Cabraser partner David Rudolph will serve as featured faculty at Practising Law Institute’s California Privacy Law 2025 event on November 18 in San Francisco.
The program will explore the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), the most comprehensive privacy law in the country, and the January 2020 updates that have significantly affected companies’ legal obligations. Attendees will learn the law’s basic framework, gain insight into compliance approaches from the both in-house and regulator perspectives, and review updates since the CCPA took effect.
David will co-lead a presentation on “The Outside Counsel Perspective,” alongside Jeffrey Tsai of DLA Piper.
The program is available to attend both online and in person.
For more information and to register, visit PLI’s website.
About David Rudolph
A partner in Lieff Cabraser’s San Francisco office, David Rudolph is a member of the firm’s Cybersecurity and Data Privacy and Antitrust and Intellectual Property practice groups. He has extensive experience litigating core technical issues in privacy cases, including in In re Anthem, Inc. Data Breach Litigation, MDL No. 2617 (N.D. Cal.), arising from a data breach that affected nearly 80 million of Anthem’s members, and in Campbell v. Facebook, Inc., No. 5:13-cv- 5996 (N.D. Cal.), in which Facebook users asserted that Facebook violated their privacy rights by scanning their private email messages.
David has represented end-payor classes in pharmaceutical antitrust litigation, including in the Cipro drug antitrust cases, the Restasis antitrust litigation, and the Generic Pharmaceuticals Price-Fixing cases. In 2017, David shared the “Outstanding Private Practice Antitrust Achievement” award from the American Antitrust Institute for his work on the Cipro case. He also represents plaintiffs in In re Domestic Airline Travel Antitrust Litigation (D.D.C.), a class action lawsuit alleging a conspiracy by United, American, Delta, and Southwest to artificially inflate domestic airline ticket prices by artificially limiting seating capacity.
David is also the author of Litigating Corporate Surveillance: Privacy, Autonomy, Power, and Democracy in the Courtroom (Routledge, 2025), in which he offers a critical corrective to prevailing views on the legality of corporate data exploitation practices, arguing that litigation—rather than legislation alone—is essential to enforcing privacy rights in democratic societies.
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