All Episodes
The Pinsent Masons Podcast — 48 episodes
47: How global conflict affects where data is stored, and UK offers tax whistleblowers a 30pc cut
47: US, EU and UK AI training policy shifts, and UK financial ombudsman is overhauled
46: The business impact of the Middle East conflict
45: How 40 year old UN principles could help with protecting kids online
44: We learn about the trade mark pitfalls of selling refurbished cookers, and discover what a UK Supreme Court ruling might mean for companies’ ability to patent AI systems.
43: Can new tool break UK’s IP vs AI deadlock? And rethinking Australian construction contracts
42: Navigating sanctions as geopolitics heats up, and the EU law change that could suit AI developers
41: COP30’s limited achievements; and rental laws in England overhauled
40: UK court makes vital AI copyright ruling, and a new culture standard for Australian construction
39: Why suppliers could be a big source of cyber vulnerability, and how legal competition might stifle innovation
38: The change in regulation that could open the biosimilars floodgates, and radical football regulation changes in England
37: How businesses can prepare for new UK immigration rules, and the EU makes third attempt at 28th regime
36: Why ECCTA should prompt culture rethink, and VAT in intra-group contracts
35: UK reforms financial regulation and pensions
34: New UK law will change how companies can use data, and the perils of AI use in litigation
33: Climate litigation hits a stumbling block, and court battle between creative industries and AI begins
32: New German court turns to English, and will a foreign buyer ban make Australia’s houses more affordable?
31: Decoding the UK-US trade agreement
30: The UK’s plans for sharing health data, and the EU’s response to Chinese AI DeepSeek
29: Why companies have human rights, and how they can use them
28: Why most AI output shouldn’t be copyright protected, and new UK union rights to access the workplace
27: A new way of thinking that could help the construction industry tackle embodied carbon, and Ireland’s AI plans
26: Why retailers won’t get the benefit of AI until they improve the quality of their data, with the inventor of Tesco’s Clubcard
25: Why some companies fear they might have over-disclosed on sustainability reporting
24: Are the UK’s planning reforms credible? And how PFAS mass actions might cross the Atlantic
23: How credible are the UK’s AI plans? And the problems of the UK's pension super-sizing plan
22: The dangers of forgetting the S in ESG; and Australia’s new cyber security law
21: UK makes fundamental changes to corporate fraud law, and how in house lawyers can retain legal privilege for documents
20: What a Trump presidency means for trade, climate policy, tech law and more
19: Inside ‘the biggest change to employment law in a generation’ – what employers in the UK need to know
18: How a Dutch tennis club ruling could hinder AI system training, and English courts get power to force litigants into ADR
17: Unpicking the EU's new policy agenda, and South Africa's long awaited electricity reform
16: The huge changes ahead for UK construction industry following Grenfell Inquiry findings, and an unusual fine for a data processor
15: Australia’s electricity infrastructure challenge, and a carbon credit tax conundrum
14: New government immediately lifts England's onshore wind ban, and £18m court ruling might mean earlier UK insolvencies
13: The UPC’s first year, and how Germany’s court digitisation could cause rise in mass claims
12: The impact European Parliament elections will have on the EU's climate and trade policies
11: The surprisingly wide scope of new EU sustainability law, and how the UK could set global self-driving car legal standards
10: Inside an AI company's copyright defence, and how finance firms can cope with AI regulation
9: How businesses can be heard in the world's election year, and South Africa's challenges implementing new anti-corruption law.
8: Analysing European court's bombshell climate ruling: will a rash of national cases follow?
7: UK builders prepare for looming building safety deadline, and the impact of changes to Irish company law
6: Germany overhauls arbitration laws, and a court victory for a 'lookalike' supermarket cider
5: New type of fund could boost sustainable development, and dealing with the unforseeable in AI litigation
4: Planning for rebuilding in Ukraine after two years of war, and Australian employees’ new right to disconnect
3: EU’s AI law clears crucial hurdle, and UK tax authorities ask: what is a crisp?
2: Sustainability in infrastructure, and trade marks in elite sport
1: Trailer for The Pinsent Masons Podcast