Intellectual Property

  • February 16, 2024

    Safeguarding from corporate cyber-threats: Good old-fashioned compliance not good enough

    Recent news about a 26 billion-record mother of all breaches prompted, among other discussions, a flurry of water cooler conversations in the days that followed the headlines. Among the sources of compromised data were big names like Tencent, Twitter/X, LinkedIn, Evite, Adobe, and records from government organizations in the United States and around the globe. This news has left many business leaders and personal users wondering if they should consider reverting to in-house storage of sensitive data, as they believe this would provide them with more control. My response is, “But would it?”

  • February 14, 2024

    Court rules PM, justice minister ‘failed’ litigants & courts with many tardy judicial appointments

    A Federal Court judge has refused to order the Trudeau government to fill the present high level of 75 superior court vacancies within specified timeframes; instead the judge recognized a “constitutional convention” that judicial vacancies “must be filled within a reasonable time” and declared his “expectation” that Ottawa will begin to discharge its unfulfilled constitutional duty to fix the country’s “untenable and appalling crisis and critical judicial vacancy situation,” including by reducing the vacancies to the mid-40s “within a reasonable time.”

  • February 14, 2024

    Securities regulator issues report on use and harms of AI in financial sector, seeks feedback

    The Autorité des marchés financiers (AMF), Quebec’s securities regulator, has released a new issues and discussion paper titled Best practices for the responsible use of AI in the financial sector “for the purpose of engaging in an open dialogue about the opportunities and issues associated with the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in the industry.”

  • February 13, 2024

    SCC’s output fell to 34 judgments in 2023, renewing questions, concerns within the bar

    Is the Supreme Court of Canada giving enough legal guidance to Canadians, particularly in private law cases? It’s a question simmering within the legal community, one that attracts the attention of academics and litigators and that might benefit from the court shedding some light, especially because the numbers of cases the nine judges hear and decide have been trending down for more than a decade, without explanation.

  • February 12, 2024

    Federal Court dismisses action alleging patent infringement by new Apotex heartburn drug

    The Federal Court has dismissed claims that a new Apotex drug infringes a patent, finding the asserted claims as invalid and not infringed by the new drug.

  • February 09, 2024

    Access to information requests ‘more than just numbers on a chart’: B.C. commissioner

    B.C.’s information and privacy commissioner is calling out the provincial government for its response time when dealing with access to information requests, flagging thousands of incidents where officials exceeded the time allowed to respond to a request without having any legal authority to do so.

  • February 09, 2024

    Federal Court denies amendments to claim in copyright case, finds them inadequately specified

    The Federal Court has rejected certain proposed amendments to a statement of claim in a copyright action, finding that the changes would expand the list of allegedly copyrighted and infringed works at issue to an unknown number of unidentified and unspecified works.

  • February 08, 2024

    Barring intervener counsel from pleading in person at SCC ‘improves access to justice’: CJ Wagner

    The Supreme Court of Canada’s controversial policy of restricting intervener counsel to virtual appearances, rather than giving them the same hybrid option as party counsel to appear in person before the judges, “offers substantial savings, especially to those farthest from Ottawa” and “as such levels the playing field and improves access to justice,” Chief Justice of Canada Richard Wagner told the Canadian Bar Association (CBA).

  • February 08, 2024

    Several options open for B.C., other provinces to tackle social media liability, legal experts say

    Hot on the heels of its law on the protection of intimate images coming into force, British Columbia is pledging to bring in legislation to hold social media companies accountable for what is posted online. And legal experts are saying that B.C., and indeed all provinces, have several options available to them to make that move.

  • February 06, 2024

    Sanctions aim at Hamas leadership; Ottawa says first time ‘non-state actors’ targeted

    The federal government says it has imposed dealings and immigration bans “effective immediately” against 11 people who “hold senior positions within Hamas or its affiliates and were integral to the planning, funding and execution of the Oct. 7 terrorist attacks against Israel” last year.

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