Latest blog articles
-
Current US and EU secondary liability standards do not address all factors to trigger liability. This influences legislation and case law, setting an uncertain secondary liability outcome of IP infringement cases against Internet Intermediaries’.
-
Officially supported export credits are instruments that governments can use to boost or support their exports, either through insurances, loans or guarantees.
-
Influencer marketing and mental health. The global spend on Influencer marketing is expected to reach $15 Billions by 2022, and naturally, brands have grasped how influential social media could be in their marketing campaign.
-
Over the past twelve months we have been working to finalize the Maastricht University Data Protection as a Corporate Social Responsibility Framework (see our first Manifesto).
-
About a year ago, this blog published my contribution “Let us not forget about EU fundamental rights,” which addressed the situation at the EU’s externa
-
We are the first European Law Students who got a diploma in computer security: this is how we did it
Technology has become an integral part of our daily life. The rapid development of technology has brought enormous benefits to almost every industry. From self-driving cars to fitness/health monitors, new tech products are saving us a considerable amount of time, costs, and worries.
-
In the fall of last year, the Dutch Raad voor Cultuur has issued an advice on how the Dutch government and Dutch museums (and the broader public in the Netherlands in general) should deal with the continuing presence of colonial-era heritage in Dutch museum collections.
-
Can a single colour alone be a trademark? The question is neither new nor unexplored.
-
In April 2019, press publishers were granted a new controversial right under the Digital Single Market Directive (Article 15).
-
As it stands, we don’t teach critical theory as part of the general international law syllabus in this Faculty.