Friday 24 October 2008

Hi, here is your weekly round-up of highlights from OUT-LAW News. As always, there are plenty of other stories from this week. You can also access our archive of weekly emails.

Advert: The Sourcing Summit, 18 & 19 November 2008, Queen Elizabeth II Conference Centre, London

This week's news on OUT-LAW.COM

American Airlines sues Yahoo! over keyword sales

American Airlines is suing search engine company Yahoo! over the use of its trade marks to trigger adverts for competing airlines. The company has previously settled a similar case with Google.
23/10/2008

Temporary workers treated as equals under new EU Directive

Temporary workers will receive many of the same protections as permanent staff because of the European Parliament's approval of a new European Union Directive. EU institutions have battled for six years over the issue.
23/10/2008

IP and media regulation will be examined in digital review

Copyright laws and the way that media and telecoms services are regulated could be due for change under a review the Government will conduct into the UK's digital economy. Ex-chief executive of Ofcom Stephen Carter will conduct the review.
23/10/2008

Advert: free OUT-LAW Breakfast Seminars - 1. Making your contract work: pitfalls and best practices; 2. Transferring data: the information security issues

Things to do before seeking merger clearance from OFT: lessons from the Co-op

Supermarket the Co-op has proposed the largest divestiture of business assets in UK competition history as part of a bid to have its buyout of Somerfield approved by the Office of Fair Trading (OFT).
22/10/2008

Managers face jail over safety breaches from January

Executives and managers could face two year jail terms for health and safety breaches under legislation just passed by Parliament. The new law will come into force in January.
21/10/2008

Inventor shouldn't have terminated contract months after alleged breach, court rules

The inventor of a car door latch was not entitled to walk away from a commercial agreement in the way that he did, the High Court has ruled. The terms of the deal had been broken at one point, but not when the inventor ended the agreement, the court said.
20/10/2008

 

RSS See our choice of OUT-LAW news feeds