Protecting corporate reputation after a privacy breach
A data privacy breach can quickly cause immeasurable damage to a company's reputation. It can affect a company's brand, public perception, customer trust, future communications strategies and advertising, regulatory record, bottom line, share price and even destroy a company entirely. Where the breach involves personal data about the public, the stakes are particularly high.
2 of 4 Insights
Is an NDA still worth the paper it's written on?
Are NDAs still an effective or realistic legal tool to use when settling disputes involving unproven allegations? If they can't be enforced, what are they worth?
1 of 4 Insights
The evolution of the EU's right to be forgotten
The 'right to be forgotten' in the context of EU data protection law, is something of a misnomer; it is, in fact, a qualified right to the erasure of personal data. While it does not afford individuals with a blanket right to have their personal data erased or forgotten (except in relation to direct marketing), it is an essential weapon for individuals in the wider privacy arsenal.
3 of 4 Insights
The rise of GDPR in media law
Defamation and privacy law were the traditional bread and butter of English media law claims.
4 of 4 Insights
Brexit - what to do now to protect your trade marks
"Seven" marks considered to be different by the EUIPO
Purple packaging not a series mark
Changes to UK trade mark law – practical impact
The General Court considers unregistered trade mark rights – not an 'Easy' issue!