Australian Business Law Review update: Vol 49 Pt 4
By journalalerts on January 24, 2022
Posted In: Australian Business Law Review (ABLR) Tagged: 4.9) ABLR AI inventor eligibility AJ George amendment of s 46 of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth) anti-competitive conduct approaches to causation in unilateral conduct cases Arlen Duke articles Artificial Inventor Project (AIP) Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Flight Centre Travel Group Ltd Australian Securities and Investments Commission causal link between the firm's conduct and the substantial lessening of competition Causation in Misuse of Market Power Claims under the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth) changes in business models involving agency arrangements Climate-related Risk Heating Up Down Under Commercial Litigation Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) determining whether a party is an agent Device for the Autonomous Bootstrapping of Unified Sentience dynamics of multi-sided platforms Editorial innovation incentivisation insurance claims handling and settlement services Insurance Claims Handling and Settling as a Financial Service after the Banking Royal Commission insurance industry insurance law reforms JA Tarr Jennifer Chambers Katharine Kemp Leah Ratcliff machine inventors managing inventor status of AI systems Michael Legg Michael Terceiro Misconduct in the Banking misuse of market power monopoly leveraging claims Most Favoured Nation provision multiple causes online booking portals in Europe Paul Latimer price-fixing recommendations of the Royal Commission regulatory challenges created by development and use of artificial intelligence (AI) remedy for unfair contract terms and unconscionability in insurance (Recommendation 4.7) Rhonda L Smith Stephen Thaler Superannuation and Financial Services Industry The Role of Agency in Competition Law: The Australian Flight Centre Case theories of causation in philosophy and in law voluntary codes of conduct (Recommendations 1.15 who and what can be an inventor for patent registration World First: An Australian Court Opens the Door to Inventor Recognition for Artificial Intelligence Systems