Cameras can be found on almost every street corner, near building entrances as well as indoors, and we are greatly accustomed to their presence. However, using cameras is regulated to a much wider extent and in greater detail than one would think at first glance. As for legal regulation, we must address the General Data Read more
Blog
Just as buying a home is a major investment for the average person, buying business property is a major investment for a company. Property transactions take a great deal of time and money to complete, and require the buyer to take the utmost care not to do the equivalent of stepping on a rake. This Read more
How and why to make a distinction between crypto coins and crypto tokens? It is a question increasingly addressed to legal advisers. The lawyers of TRINITI Finance, Intellectual Property and IT Law teams advise their customers namely in these areas. Read more
The European Court of Human Rights passed a judgement in a case last year where the main issue was whether or not the court had ordered excessively large compensation for non-pecuniary damage for defamation. More precisely, was the 1,25 million euros ordered by the Court of Justice of Ireland too big a sum for publishing Read more
When lodging an application to the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) it is important to keep in mind that it is a formal and quite complex procedure where even one small mistake can cost you your right to even recourse to the Court. In addition, ECHR is not a court of fourth instance and Read more
While the internet has made it easier for people around the world to communicate, it has also created opportunities for widespread infringement of rights, including by the publishing of false statements. Individual about whom the false information is published can be physically thousands of kilometers away from the offender. Read more
In its recent 01.10.2015 decision, Dunamenti Erömü v Commission (C 357/14 P), the European Court found that the investment made by a private investor in 1995 contained prohibited state aid as from Hungary’s accession to the European Union on 01.05.2004. By this decision, the Court also changed the earlier single economic unit doctrine, distinguishing between Read more
In December 2015, Russia adopted a law that gave the Constitutional Court of Russia a right to decide if a decision of the European Court of Human Rights is in conformity with the Russian Constitution and, thus, a right to forbid the enforcement of European Court of Human Rights decisions in Russia. Most probably the Read more
The enforcement of judgements given in civil and commercial matters in other EU Member States became simpler from 10 January 2015.[1] Before, in order to enforce a judgement in another EU Member State, one had to have recourse to the corresponding court first and then apply for the declaration of enforceability of the judgement there. Read more