The Internet of Things (IoT) will enable devices to communicate and share data with one another and data to be combined and used across multiple applications. However, such applications also raise relevant legal issues. The Italian Telecom Authority (AGCOM) has for this purpose just launched a consultation on the Internet of Things in order to understand how to better foster this market whose value will reach $ 7.1 trillion in sales by 2020.
Below are some of my presentations arranged by me Giulio Coraggio that might be of interest
Come gestire le problematiche privacy dell'emergenza Covid-19 in Italia
Artificial intelligence - Not the evil, but the New Electricity
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One year of GDPR, what happened and what to expect!
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This blog is run by me, Giulio Coraggio (here is my profile on DLA Piper website). I am a technology, privacy and gaming lawyer, but I am more an out-of-the-box thinker and a business partner of my clients. My goal is to generate a value added for my clients, identifying…
The definition of personal data remains unchanged under the Digital Omnibus. What this means for AI training and legitimate interest under GDPR.
The Data Act effective date is TODAY 12 September 2025 with most of the provisions of Regulation (EU) 2023/2854, better known as the Data Act, will finally come into force.
With the EU Data Act now into force, companies must urgently prepare for sweeping new obligations on data access, sharing, and interoperability across connected products and services.
How is the legal function evolving in the age of smart factories, connected machines, and AI-driven industrial solutions?
The European Commission has published FAQs on the Data Act, one of the pillars of the European Data Strategy with several impacts on Internet of Things (IoT) devices and any connected technology.
On July 26, 2024, the European Supervisory Authorities (ESAs) issued the final draft Regulatory Technical Standards (RTS) concerning subcontracting under the Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA).
The decision of the CJEU on potential damages deriving from a data breach might potentially increase the risk of a class action connected to privacy related violations.
