Publication
AI regulation in the UK: Will the next government introduce AI legislation?
The current government’s approach to AI regulation draws on non-binding, cross-sectoral principles.
Global | Publication | June 2016
Privilege extended to communications between patent and trade-mark agents, and their clients
On June 24, 2016, amendments to the Patent Act and Trade-marks Act extending privilege to certain confidential communications between registered patent or trade-mark agents and their clients went into force. The protections will extend to existing communications that are not already part of a trial. These provisions were part of Bill C-59, as part of the 2015 budget.
Unlike “merely” confidential communications, privileged communications are generally protected from being compelled as evidence at trial. Such protections already existed in certain communications between lawyers and their clients, but did not extend to patent or trade-mark agents. This created situations of ambiguity where lawyers, who were also agents, communicate with their clients regarding patents or trade-marks. By now extending privilege to patent and trade-mark agents, these provisions provide recognition of the importance of intellectual property protection and, in particular, the need for frank and candid discussions between agents and their clients.
Publication
The current government’s approach to AI regulation draws on non-binding, cross-sectoral principles.
Publication
Our healthcare lawyers comment on healthcare providers and MCOs that are beginning to experience the financial impacts of the end of continuous Medicaid enrollment and the reductions associated with the enhanced FMAP.
Subscribe and stay up to date with the latest legal news, information and events . . .
© Norton Rose Fulbright LLP 2023