3Kites’ Paul Longhurst and Richard Kemp of Kemp IT Law explain the benefits of moving away from on-premise systems and the practical steps to take | 2yrs
3Kites’ Paul Longhurst and Richard Kemp of Kemp IT Law explain the benefits of moving away from on-premise systems and the practical steps to take | 2yrs
City firm has recruited Osborne Clarke's former local managing partner to spearhead new office | 2yrs
Paul Longhurst of 3Kites looks beyond ‘innovation theatre’ to outline AI’s practical benefits for law firms, in-house legal teams and their clients | 2yrs
Deal with US business intelligence provider adds 100-strong team; taps into law firm demand for data analytics | 2yrs
Three of five incoming partners promoted to leadership roles within Boston firm's technology practice | 2yrs
As brands deepen relationships with influencers, contracts are becoming more complex, web seminar finds | 2yrs
Law Over Borders guide helps international brands navigate laws in array of key jurisdictions | 2yrs
New York firm's launch in Palo Alto will be followed shortly by a second office launch in San Francisco | 2yrs
Webinar hosted by Luxury Law Alliance and Bird & Bird will explore ‘trends, tips and opportunities’ | 2yrs
Commercial law specialist Christian Bartsch to take over in April; firm underlines care taken over succession planning | 2yrs
Ex-Kirkland partner turned private equity CEO Rick Perkal on the complexities of omnichannel retailing and working with founders to accelerate growth | 2yrs
This week's roundup also includes Withers, Bird & Bird and Clifford Chance | 2yrs
New office marks the latest instalment of the New York firm's 'strategic' West Coast expansion | 2yrs
Launch marks firm’s fifth office since it was established in 2019 | 2yrs
Move sees firm relaunch in Asia after last year’s Shanghai exit | 2yrs
Speakers at September’s in-person event include executives from Cocoon, Emilio Pucci, L’Oréal, Manolo Blahnik and McKinsey | 2yrs
Nadia Hoosen joins ahead of OneWeb’s commercial services launch later this year | 3yrs
The proposed legislation means that companies will no longer be free in the safety assessment of their AI products and will have to observe strict requirements, writes Elisabeth Kohoutek and Ulf Grundmann | 3yrs