The Long Goodbye
Laurence Eastham looks back at almost 25 years working with SCL…
Laurence Eastham looks back at almost 25 years working with SCL…
Richard Willcox covers an important decision on the new Electronic Communications Code, which answers the hotly-contested issue of whether landowners can avoid the imposition of telecoms apparatus by preventing operators from undertaking initial suitability surveys….
Read More… from Telecoms Code: Operators’ Entitlement to Survey New Sites
It seemed unfair to hang on to this article from Professor Chris Marsden, another in our Tech Law Masterclass series for the October/November issue, when Internet regulation is such a hot topic. Chris looks back at the Internet’s legal history, with a view to helping us to move forward in an informed manner…
Read More… from The Regulated End of Internet Law, and the Return to Computer and Information Law?
Laurence Eastham reflects on the SCL Annual Conference 2018, which had keynotes, panels, a conversation and flash talks…
Read More… from SCL Conference 18 – Flash Event Flashes Past
Rachel Lidgate and Charlie Morgan offer an in-depth look at smart contracts and the teasing challenges which they display…
Read More… from Hashing out the Implications of Smart Contracting under English Law
In this opinion piece, Ben Taylor explains why he believes that building transparency into AI is critical to the future of automated decision-making platforms in the criminal justice system…
Read More… from Negating Schrodinger’s Justice through AI Transparency
Anna Morfey and Amandine Gueret consider recent developments which offer a first glimpse into growing challenges for EU competition law…
Read More… from Resale Price Maintenance and Artificial Intelligence
Peter Leonard asks ‘who’s in charge here?’ and whether we are equipped to stay in charge…
Read More… from AI Challenges and the Law: Being smart enough to boss around smart devices and AI
Mark O’Conor reflects on SCL’s activities and looks forward to the forthcoming SCL Conference…
Lynn Richmond looks at the way we apportion blame in law and the need for a reconsideration of the relevant law in the light of the development of AI. She goes on to bring the issue close to home by considering the liability of lawyers in the future AI-influenced practice of law…