GamingLawPills No. 27 brings news on measures from the UK and the Swedish gambling commission to strenghten self-exclusion systems and the compliance of operators with them.
2018 was the GDPR year, but are companies fully compliant with privacy law? What regulators will ask to ensure compliance? Here are our 2019 predictions.
Cybersecurity represents a major risk for companies that will need to change their approach on security in 2019, also in relation to M&A transactions, and corrective actions might include a cyber risk insurance coverage according to our predictions.
LawBytes #28 deals this week with the 5G legal obstscles in Italy raised by the Italian Communications Authority and the EBA report on crypto assets.
Sponsorship agreements of Serie A teams by gambling operators are exempted from the applicability of the Italian gambling advertising ban for an interim period.
GamingLawPills No. 26 covers the UK proposal on a credit card gambling ban and threats of the German State of Hesse to set its own gambling industry
iConsumer deals with trademark rights in a song and why they may be restricted under the applicable laws in some cases and what you shall watch.
LawBytes #27 deals this week with the privacy heat at Las Vegas CES and the EDPS data breach guidelines for EU institutions and bodies.
It was a busy year for the gambling sector with operators and suppliers that might be forced to reinvent, or at least considerably adjust, their business model to suit new markets, following their opening up, and new market conditions, due to recent regulatory restrictions.
GamingLawPills No. 25 brings news on accessibility rules for video games under the US CVAA and on the Unfair Competition Prevention Act law which outlaws game piracy and console modding in Japan.
