Publication
Motor Finance Redress: The Way Ahead
On August 1, 2025, the UK Supreme Court delivered its long-awaited judgment in Hopcraft v Close Brothers Limited and on 3 August the FCA announced it would consult on a redress scheme.
EMEA | Publication | June 2025
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(Communication)
Long before Samuel Morse invented the Morse Code, humans had found ways to communicate over both time and distance. Cave paintings allowed stories to be passed down through generations, and the invention of the printing press created possibilities for these stories to travel greater distances. Modern day influencers may think they invented the idea of documenting food, but our ancestors were including depictions of food on cave walls as far back as 40,000 years ago.
Our need and desire to communicate may not have changed much over the thousands of years since our ancestors etched those drawings, but it is impossible to ignore that the way in which we communicate has changed and still continues to change. Other than face-to-face communication, our interactions largely take place in the digital world – scrolling social media, checking news sites, streaming films and TV shows, working (remotely or in the office), adjusting our smart thermostats, sending e-mails at work and at home, attending virtual meetings. These things may in themselves make up only a fraction of our day, but when combined it means we spend an average of 13 hours online every single day1. That’s a little over half our day that is spent in the digital world.
We may access that digital world from our phones, our laptops, our TV’s or our tablets. Yet these are just the gateways. Behind these gadgets sits the backbone of the digital world, the data centre. Data centres don’t operate the cloud, or create AI models, or stream the content. But they do enable it, power it, streamline it, accelerate it.
It is difficult to predict with any accuracy what the future demand for data centre capacity will look like. Whilst the rate of adoption of AI will impact this, so will the types of computer chips that are used and the balance of edge and cloud computing. Whichever figures you look at though, they all predict an increase in demand, and, if we fail to meet that demand, a significant supply deficit.
In this guide we take a closer look at data centres – the types, key challenges and funding, and how securitisation can help bridge the funding gap.
Publication
On August 1, 2025, the UK Supreme Court delivered its long-awaited judgment in Hopcraft v Close Brothers Limited and on 3 August the FCA announced it would consult on a redress scheme.
Publication
The Regional Court of Munich (LG München I) has issued a landmark judgment in GEMA v OpenAI (Case No. 42 O 14139/24), holding that the use of copyrighted song lyrics for training generative AI models without a licence violates German copyright law.
Publication
Songa Product and Chemical Tankers III AS v Kairos Shipping II LLC [2025] EWCA Civ 1227 (07 October 2025) has clarified the extent of the obligation on the Charterer to redeliver a vessel following the termination of a Barecon 2001 charter and of the Owner’s right to require it to be redelivered to a port “convenient to them”.
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