The most recent issue of the Journal of the Australian Society for Computers and the Law is available here: http://classic.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/ANZCompuLawJl/recent.html
This journal includes articles on privacy law and cybersecurity law.
A blog relating to Internet legal issues by Professor John Swinson, University of Queensland
The most recent issue of the Journal of the Australian Society for Computers and the Law is available here: http://classic.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/ANZCompuLawJl/recent.html
This journal includes articles on privacy law and cybersecurity law.
In January, the NY Times published a long article on Tech predictions for 2021. There was a section on privacy laws, that was U.S. focused but interesting reading. An extract:
Lawmakers will take on comprehensive federal privacy legislation. (Hopefully.) |
|
Greg Bensinger, member of the New York Times editorial board: |
|
Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle have indicated that they suddenly care about Americans’ privacy rights online. I am looking forward to them putting their money where their mouth is in 2021 by rolling out comprehensive federal privacy legislation. |
|
Is this a pipe dream? Yes. But if anything good comes from backlash against technology companies, I hope it’s that consumers have more control over the rights to their own data. |
About two years ago, Landmark White (a property valuation firm in Australia) was subject to a number of cyber security incidents. Justice moves slowly.
Landmark White’s cyber security standards will come under the spotlight this week, as the trial kicks off of an IT contractor accused of stealing customer data from the firm and putting it on the dark web.
See https://www.afr.com/property/commercial/landmark-white-data-breach-trial-begins-20210304-p577sx
The Federal Court of Australia has sided with the Patents Office and upheld a rejection of a patent application for an invention that improves the timeliness and accuracy of risk information. It was decided by the judge that the claimed invention was merely a business method or scheme for sharing and completing work place health and safety documents, and was thus unpatentable.
See Repipe Pty Ltd v Commissioner of Patents (No 3) [2021] FCA 31 https://jade.io/article/783336
Amazon was refused a patent in Australia on the grounds that the invention was not patentable subject matter.
See Amazon Technologies, Inc. [2021] APO 7 https://jade.io/article/785911
The patent application was directed to the field of computer resource virtualization. Providers, such as Amazon, manage large-scale computing resources that can be accessed on demand by their many customers via virtual machines. This allows various computing resources to be efficiently and securely shared by multiple customers.
The European Data Protection Board (EDPB) has recently published guidelines with examples for data breach notification under the GDPR.
The Guidelines set out common types of data breaches, such as ransomware, lost or stolen devices, social engineering attacks and the like, and set out case studies to clarify notification and remediation obligations.
The Australian Patents Office has decided that an AI machine cannot be an inventor for the purposes of granting a patent.
"Section 15(1) is inconsistent with an artificial intelligence machine being treated as an inventor, since it is not possible to identify a person who can be granted a patent."
Further, the person who operated the AI machine was also not an inventor:
"I have considered the alternative option that Dr Thaler is the inventor. It seems clear that Dr Thaler asserts that he did not devise the invention but merely acquired knowledge of the invention from the artificial intelligence machine. In the light of JMVB Dr Thaler would not be the inventor."
U.S. law firm Wilson Sonsini has a good summary of likely FTC priorities.
Potential key priorities:
Read in The Wall Street Journal: https://apple.news/AykpuzRwHQJeQWQoc3GPxyg
Listen to this podcast where I discuss how damages should be assessed in privacy and cybersecurity lawsuits. The Lawyers Weekly Show host J...