[ad_1] Brexit has cast a long shadow over the intellectual property sector, while artificial intelligence tools – prolific users of other people’s content – await the certainty test
[ad_1] In a lengthy legal battle, the media and telecoms giant Sky Ltd (formerly Sky Plc) sued computer software company SkyKick UK Ltd for trade mark infringement and
[ad_1] Of all the recent public inquiries – including Grenfell and infected blood – the Post Office Horizon Inquiry has done most to put in-house lawyers in the
[ad_1] Reena Parmar did not know her eldest son was neurodivergent until he started school. ‘We hadn’t realised,’ she says. But then ‘things became very challenging very quickly.
[ad_1] In certain rarefied circles, the term SLAPP – strategic lawsuit against public participation – has been around for decades. It was apparently coined in 1988 by two
[ad_1] The Court of Appeal’s decision in Standish v Standish [2024] EWCA Civ 567 is a leading case on the treatment of non-matrimonial assets and, in particular, on
[ad_1] Are employers focusing on neurodivergent inclusion to the exclusion of physical disabilities? When talking to physically disabled people (my preference is to say this rather than ‘people
[ad_1] The low down Private client work has escaped from the doldrums of the early 2000s, when leading corporate law firms ejected private client colleagues. Now they are
[ad_1] As PR consultancy the London Communications Agency highlighted in October: ‘The need for new social homes is acute, with 1.3 million individuals and households currently on waiting