Key report following the World Lawyers Forum Dubai Litigation Summit AI Disputes panel, hosted by Patrick Rode. One message was clear: “move fast and break things” is over. Responsible AI, governance, and oversight now determine liability.
https://t.co/WItl6yEGB1
Third-party funding is now mainstream in investment arbitration, but can successful claimants recover funding fees? Can Eken (Durham University), with Peilin Chen, examines tribunal caution, misconduct, cost security & when recovery may be justified.
https://t.co/GfejBDZ4O3
Check out the latest article in my newsletter: The Autonomy Frontier: Agentic AI in the Architecture of Modern Law and Litigation https://t.co/f4wv9beKDR via @LinkedIn
A $1.5bn settlement, split court rulings, and a legal fight reshaping how AI is trained. From “fair use” debates to global regulation, the future of creative rights, and who gets paid, remains unresolved.
https://t.co/ahHNTuW6nP
What lies ahead for UK litigation finance in 2026?
A pointed preview by Stuart Hills on regulation, market maturity, PACCAR, AI, and the need for a joined-up industry voice. A nod to the challenges and opportunities shaping the year ahead.
https://t.co/oFcopj5wur
The real story of AI in 2025 isn’t another model launch. It’s a $1.5b settlement over training data—and courts that can’t agree on whether that training is “transformative” or outright substitution.
My new piece, “The Price of Machine Learning: How a $1.5 Billion Settlement Redefines AI’s Legal Landscape,” breaks down what changed and who will pay for training next.
#AICopyright
#FairUse
#LegalTech
#AIEthics
#MachineLearning
https://t.co/klKWOLxfp1
Monetising judgments & arbitral awards often needs more than traditional enforcement. Under English law, Court Appointed Receivership offers a flexible tool where freezing orders fall short, especially with offshore or opaque assets.
https://t.co/hKiukZ98qu