Lalchandani Simon’s Daniel Davis and Talia Boiangin Named First and Second Vice Chair of the Florida Bar’s Business Law Section Computer and Technology Law Committee

Lalchandani Simon is delighted to announce that Daniel Davis will serve as first vice chair of the Florida Bar’s Business Law Section Computer and Technology Law Committee. Mr. Davis previously served as the committee’s second vice chair. Talia Boiangin will fill the second vice chair of the Committee. 

Lalchandani Simon Associates Daniel Davis and Talia Boiangin

Lalchandani Simon Associates Daniel Davis and Talia Boiangin

The Computer and Technology Law Committee educates the Business Law Section and The Florida Bar members on substantive computer and technology law issues, cases, and statutes. The Committee also provides CLEs and practice guides on emerging topics relevant to the Committee’s substantive practice areas.

Mr. Davis and Ms. Boiangin focus on healthcare and technology related matters at Lalchandani Simon PL. Mr. Davis is particularly interested in assisting businesses with technology and intellectual property issues and assisting businesses in their litigation needs. Ms. Boiangin’s special interests are startups and topics at the intersection of law and technology. She is particularly focused on data privacy, blockchain and digital currency, and legal tech.

Mr. Davis provides both litigation and non-litigation support to businesses in the technology arena. Mr. Davis has advised businesses in disputes involving music licensing, copyright, trademark, and trade dress. While working with Lockheed-Martin, Mr. Davis implemented an improved parts labeling system and created web-based cost savings tracking programs for various work groups. Mr. Davis was also the Executive Technology Editor of the University of Maryland School of Law’s Journal of Business and Technology Law. 

Ms. Boiangin has researched legal implications in cutting-edge industries like blockchain, AI, and eSports, as well as developed innovative applications to streamline attorneys’ workflows with clients. She was an Access to Justice Technology Fellow for a nonprofit legal services firm, where she was tasked with drafting a privacy policy for minors’ use of a consumer law chatbot. Ms. Boiangin also provided legal services to clients for Miami Law’s Startup Law Clinic and worked at University of Miami’s Office of Technology Transfer. She was also a fellow at Cyber Civil Rights Initiative, a nonprofit dedicated to combatting online harassment. During her last year of law school, she served as Online Publication Editor for the Inter-American Law Review.