Latest news
Firm that made 22m automated marketing calls in PI and other fields fined £270,000
A company that made 22 million nuisance calls has been fined £270,000 by the Information Commissioner’s Office, one of the highest penalties it has ever levied for such an offence. It comes amid disappointment that this week’s Budget contained no mention of a ban on cold-calling in personal injury.
AXA teams up with ABS in bid to “disrupt delivery of legal advice” with machine-learning app
AXA Insurance has teamed up with alternative business structure rradar to launch what they call “a world first in legal and risk advice”, powered by IBM Watson technology. ‘Grace’ is described as “a machine learning-driven app which engages businesses directly with a virtual assistant to deliver the knowledge and experience of legal and risk management experts”.
Legal regulators eye piloting new price and service transparency requirements
Plans to force lawyers to be more transparent about their fees and complaints records could first be piloted across areas of work that have different regulators. The Solicitors Regulation Authority could also widen its plan for an online register of solicitors’ regulatory data to encompass all regulated lawyers.
Court of Appeal again rejects summary judgment ruling favouring solicitors’ firm
TThe Court of Appeal has again allowed an appeal against a ruling giving a firm of solicitors summary judgment, this time in relation to a claim for non-payment of fees and a counter-claim of negligence against them.
International firm sets up team of lawyers to cut through AI “hype”
International firm Bryan Cave has set up a team of tech-friendly lawyers from its offices around the world to cut through the “hype” around the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in law firms. It said AI has “enormous potential”, but the real value comes from “lawyers being part of the conversation when these tools come out”.
Appeal court sends £4m solicitors’ negligence claim to trial
The Court of Appeal has overturned a ruling that gave a national law firm summary judgment in a case alleging that its negligence had caused a company to lose a £4m intellectual property licensing deal with a global engineering giant.
Law Society attacks SRA’s “limited” indemnity insurance research, including failure to consider cybercrime
Research by the Solicitors Regulation Authority to support its plans to reform indemnity insurance has “clear limitations”, ignoring the recent increase in claims related to cybercrime among other failures, the Law Society has claimed as it geared up for the next round of its battle with the regulator over the reforms.
CILEx launches bid to recruit law graduate paralegals
The Chartered Institute of Legal Executives (CILEx) has launched a campaign to recruit paralegals – especially law graduates who have not gained further qualification – as associate members. They are entitled to use the letters ACILEx after their name.
First Uber, now DX – union brings legal action over “forced self-employed” workers
DX has become the latest delivery company to face legal claims that it is taking advantage of the ‘gig economy’ by forcing workers into bogus self-employment, after the GMB union announced it was to start legal action on behalf of members working as couriers.
“Kamikaze” solicitor who took £1.2m from client account to fund gambling habit struck off
A vastly experienced solicitor who took over £1.2m from client account in just two months to fund an online gambling habit has been struck off, despite the money being paid back and his claim that personal difficulties mean he had been in a “kamikaze” state of mind and “pushed the ‘sod it’ button”.











