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Generative AI: A global guide to key IP considerations
Artificial intelligence (AI) raises many intellectual property (IP) issues.
Global | Publication | May 2018
The old saying that the Stone Age didn’t end because we ran out of stones has perhaps never been more relevant. The key problem in managing the challenges of a world in change overdrive remains not merely acknowledging shifts and disruptions, but doing what is necessary to stay ahead of them.
The solution requires that organizations better understand the social, legal and regulatory implications of disruption, and we key on factors influencing the following four primary areas of the energy domain:
It would not be a stretch to say the world has never been more turbulent in peace time than it has been over the past two decades. The heightened sense that decarbonization is now a top priority means, right or wrong, that there are no easy retreats or places to hide for anyone going forward.
Survival in this climate, then, amounts to not just thinking and talking about doing things differently, but actually doing things differently – starting by embracing the complexities and uncertainties of the energy transition that most now take for granted.
“Remember, nobody changes the world on their own,” Chris Hadfield reminds us, and we agree. Getting in front of the waves of change today is necessarily a collaborative process. To that end, we look forward to your comments and questions.
For more information, contact our energy team.
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Artificial intelligence (AI) raises many intellectual property (IP) issues.
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The UK remains a world leader in offshore wind, accounting for roughly 20 percent of global offshore wind capacity, with 11.3 GW operational. It is forecast that installed capacity will rise to 19.5 GW by mid 2020s.
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On 21 May 2024, the European Council (or Council) adopted the so-called ‘Hydrogen and decarbonised gas market package’ (the Gas Package). The package contains a recast of the 715/2009 gas regulation (Gas Regulation) and a recast of the 2009/73 gas directive (Gas Directive) aimed at reforming the existing EU regulatory framework to support the deployment of renewable and low-carbon gases, in particular hydrogen. As such, it represents a major development in the EU gas market.
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