IFCLA Conference Taster Articles
Whet your appetite for the IFCLA Conference with two articles from its many speakers…
Whet your appetite for the IFCLA Conference with two articles from its many speakers…
Lucie Audibert won the SCL Student Essay Prize 2016 with this piece addressing the question: To what extent should the functionality, as opposed to the source code, of computer programs be protected by copyright….
Read More… from Computer Program Functionality and Copyright
SCL is pleased to announce that Lucie Audibert of LSE has won this year’s student essay prize competition…
Read More… from SCL Student Essay Prize 2016: Winner and Top Five
Pearse Ryan and Shane McCarthy consider recent policy and strategy level developments in the cyber security sphere in Ireland….
Read More… from Ireland: Recent Developments in the National Cyber Security Sphere
A Court of Appeal judgment confronts ‘the issue of how critical fair trial protections can be extended to prevent or control communications on social media’….
Tim Turner offers his forthright view that the requirement for clear and unambiguous consent under the GDPR is clear and unambiguous, and raises concerns about the advice given to some in the charity sector that muddies this clarity….
James Murray reports on a recent High Court judgment that allowed a subject access request even though it was alleged to be aimed at seeking a litigation advantage….
Read More… from Subject Access Requests: Guidance on Crime and Legal Privilege Exemptions
Roger Bickerstaff, the IFCLA President, explains why you should seriously consider attending the IFCLA Conference…
The EU Commission has sent a Statement of Objections to Google relating to its Android operating system and applications. This is a significant step in terms of competition law proceedings….
Read More… from EU Commission v Google: Latest Development on Anti-trust
Stephen Mason is calling for involvement from fellow lawyers in the drafting of a convention on electronic evidence…
Read More… from Proposal for a Convention on Electronic Evidence