Non-Sequiturs: 11.20.15

* Stingrays -- no, not the kind that killed the Crocodile Hunter, but the kind that are used to determine cell phone locations and intercept messages -- have been deemed by a judge as too powerful for law enforcement to use without safeguards. [Ars Technica] * On the ethics of misrepresentations in negotiations. [Associate's Mind] * You shouldn't have to feel bad about billing 2,000 hours -- even if everyone around you is billing 2,500. [Bashful Buffalo Marketing] * The latest buzz from the world of family law: judge rules a divorced couple's frozen embryos should be destroyed. [LA Times] * The controversy surrounding the new documentary The Hunting Ground about sexual assault on campus features an incident at Harvard Law School. [Slate]

* Stingrays — no, not the kind that killed the Crocodile Hunter, but the kind that are used to determine cell phone locations and intercept messages — have been deemed by a judge as too powerful for law enforcement to use without safeguards. [Ars Technica]

* On the ethics of misrepresentations in negotiations. [Associate’s Mind]

* You shouldn’t have to feel bad about billing 2,000 hours — even if everyone around you is billing 2,500. [Bashful Buffalo Marketing]

* The latest buzz from the world of family law: judge rules a divorced couple’s frozen embryos should be destroyed. [LA Times]

* The controversy surrounding the new documentary The Hunting Ground about sexual assault on campus features an incident at Harvard Law School. [Slate]

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