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Vietnam: Competition Law Fact Sheet
Overview of the main provisions of the Competition Law, and discussion of the enforcement regime and recent enforcement trends.
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Australia | Publication | April 2021
This article was co-authored with Emily Shaw.
On Thursday 22 April 2021, ASIC released Consultation Paper 340, seeking feedback on its draft guidance to the upcoming breach reporting and remediation reforms which will come into effect on 1 October 2021. The consultation period closes on 3 June 2021, with ASIC intending to publish final guidance and an information sheet later this year.
The reforms strengthen the breach reporting regime for financial services licensees and introduces new obligations for credit licensees. See our insight here for more details.
The consultation paper includes 2 attachments: draft regulatory guide 78 on breach reporting and an information sheet regarding the new notify, investigate and remediate obligations. Read the draft regulatory guide and information sheet here.
The reforms are extensive and onerous in many respects. They are interconnected to each other and other reforms that also land in October 2021. In ASIC’s words, the reforms are designed to strengthen and clarify the breach reporting obligations in order to provide greater certainty for the industry and to ensure that breach reports are timely and consistent. ASIC uses the information provided in breach reports to detect non-compliance and misconduct early - ASIC expects that this will remain a critical feature of the new and improved regime.
Publication
Overview of the main provisions of the Competition Law, and discussion of the enforcement regime and recent enforcement trends.
Publication
Artificial intelligence (AI) raises many intellectual property (IP) issues.
Publication
The European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR or the Court) recently ruled in Verein KlimaSeniorinnen Schweiz & Ors v. Switzerland (Application No. 53600/20) that Switzerland had breached the European Convention of Human Rights (the Convention) by not taking sufficient action against climate change. In particular, it found a breach of the right to respect for private and family life contained in Article 8 of the Convention, based on Switzerland’s failure to mitigate the impact of climate change on the lives, health, well-being and quality of life of its citizens. It also ruled that Switzerland had breached the right to a fair trial in terms of Article 6, in that the domestic courts failed to examine the merits of the applicants’ complaints, including the scientific evidence. In this article we consider the key features of this landmark judgment, which has wide ramifications for Member States of the Convention.
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