The SCL Accredited IT Lawyer Scheme is a recognition programme for experienced professionals working at the intersection of law and technology. Designed to celebrate commitment, expertise and ...
Jonathan Hewett summarises and analyses this week’s important Supreme Court decision over patent protection for AI and computer-implemented inventions In a landmark decision on 11 February 2026, the ...
Society for Computers and Law Unit 4.5, Paintworks Bristol BS4 3EH hello@scl.org ...
Catch up on the last month's tech law news with our monthly downloadable news review (pdf) ...
Ben Evans takes a timely comparative look at the approaches of the EU and Türkiye to digital sovereignty, with a focus on cloud computing. This blog was published first by NASAMER Law Blog, Koç ...
Take advantage of our early bird offer to secure your place – spaces are limited and demand is expected to be high. Early bird rates: £345 + VAT (£414) for SCL members £690 + VAT (£828) for ...
The European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) formally announced the publication of EN 304 223, the first global standard to set baseline cyber security requirements for all Artificial ...
Aaron Trebble summarises a recent Court of Appeal judgment which looked at vitual assets as property under the Theft Act The Court of Appeal in R v Lakeman has determined that virtual gold pieces in ...
As data centres become a critical part of our infrastructure, Peter Dalton, Adil Tirmizi and Sophia Wah review the current risks and regulations around them. Demand for data centres continues to grow ...
Mark Ryan of SES Secure maps the use of software escrow to some of the requirements proposed in the Cyber Security & Resilience (Network and Information Systems) Bill The UK’s proposed Cyber Security ...
The ICO has announced that it will be scrutinising how popular games played by children protect online privacy. 90% of UK children play games on digital devices and the ICO will be 11.7 million UK ...
The Office for Budget Responsibility estimates that a cyber-attack on critical national infrastructure could temporarily increase borrowing by over £30 billion – equivalent to 1.1% of GDP. The UK ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results