Authored by Lindsay O’Connor , General Manager Content Pacific & Content Strategy APAC For years, legal technology has promised greater efficiency. Firms have invested in research platforms, document...
The use of artificial intelligence in legal practice continues to mature. While early adoption focused on discrete applications such as drafting assistance, document summarisation, and research support...
This blog was originally published in 2025 and has been updated in March, 2026 to reflect Protégé General AI’s updates. As AI becomes more common in legal practice, many professionals are discovering...
This blog was originally published in 2020 by Professor Sharon Christensen, Queensland University of Technology, and has been updated in the Australian Property Law Bulletin in 2026 to reflect current...
Authored by Alison Cripps , Head of Workplace, In-House and Technology, Practical Guidance “It’s just a smart precinct pilot - nothing major.” Two meetings later, the diagram tells a different story...
“There’s no such thing as anonymity anymore” quotes Nathan Scudder of the University of Technology in a recent article inside the Privacy Law Bulletin. He asks, “…are we now at a point where — if enough investigative time and effort is applied —can almost any suspect can be identified from their discarded DNA ?”
The increase in publicly available genetic data presents investigators of cold cases with potential leads to criminal suspects and the bittersweet opportunity to return unidentified human remains to their grieving families.
But does public interest outweigh privacy concerns as the increasing popularity of recreational DNA testing makes it likely that anyone leaving genetic material at a crime scene will also leave clues as to their distant relatives?
As technology changes so can the privacy lens through which we view the potential for that new technology to deliver benefit to society. Commentators have written about the rise of “Big Data policing” in recent years, but the underlying principle has not changed since the detective and their notebook.
The tools at the disposal of an investigator have dramatically increased information-gathering and analysis capabilities.
These new capabilities can help find suspects and solve crimes but — almost invariably — there is a trade-off with privacy.
Read the full article on Lexis Advance.
You may also like to read this article: Forensic Science in Criminal Trials: Is It a Double-Edged Sword?
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