Predictions 2020: There is always work for undertakers
Professor Chris Marsden thinks there will be a mini-cyberlaw boom as we adjust to the post-Brexit era.
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Professor Chris Marsden thinks there will be a mini-cyberlaw boom as we adjust to the post-Brexit era.
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Neil Brown, of decoded:legal, looks at what's ahead for ISPs and telcos in 2020 touching on online harms, blocking pornography and surveillance regulation.
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Katie Simmonds and Andy Parsons from Womble Bond Dickinson (UK) LLP see that blockchain and GDPR may not be compatible.
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Rebecca Keating, barrister at 4 Pump Court, on the quantum supremacy race and a new boost for classical computers
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Marta Dunphy-Moriel presents Kemp Little's Top 5 Predictions for 2020 touching on privacy class actions, ad tech scrutiny, facial recognition and autonomous vehicles.
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Conor Courtney, SCL Ambassador at UCL, is worried about an overlooked cyber security risk in the student world.
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Andrew Haslam, eDisclosure Project Manager at Squire Patton Boggs, reflects on the unintended consequences of DSARs and the cautious progress of the eDisclsoure pilot. Plus who will win the Six Nations?
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Kicking off our Predictions, Reflections and Resolutions in earnest, Anna Cook and Vik Khurana of Bristows reflect on how technology has featured in society in 2019, touching on announcements by tech companies, investigations by regulators and pitches by political leaders.
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The SCL Chair, Mark O'Conor, considers inclusiveness and encourages you to get involved with the Society
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David Chaplin calls for your contributions for the December issue of Computers and Law
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