LexisNexis®
University

Generative AI and IP

Run Time
83 Minutes
Learning Method
On-Demand Training
Practice Area
Intellectual Property
Available Until
06/12/2026

Price £130.00

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Description

In this webinar on generative AI and IP, our speakers from Osborne Clarke discuss the following:

  • generative AI basics;
  • why IP rights are potentially relevant;
  • copyright;
  • patents;
  • database rights;
  • trademarks & branding;
  • trade secrets & confidential information;
  • infringement risks (input);
  • infringement risks (output);
  • US cases; and
  • horizon scanning & risk mitigation.

For a preview, click the video link below:


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For further details on these requirements please visit our continuing education page.

Literature

Speakers

Tamara Quinn

Knowledge Lawyer Director

Osborne Clarke

Tamara specialises in the law of artificial Intelligence, data, emerging technologies, and non-contentious intellectual property, and leads our Knowledge team in these areas.

She has many years' experience in the protection, acquisition, sale and licensing of IP rights; in-depth expertise in dealing with all aspects of data privacy, as well as advising extensively on the legal aspects of the creation and deployment of both generative and traditional AI systems.

Tamara has a particular interest in the intersection of data and IP laws with AI and other emerging technologies, such as augmented and virtual realities, blockchain and robotics.

She has helped many technology clients, in areas such as bioinformatics, medical imagining, facial recognition, AI chatbots, social media, online search, electric vehicles and charging networks, and gaming. She has also worked with a broad range of clients in other sectors, ranging from investment funds and real estate, to veterinary services and film special effects.

Qualified as both a solicitor and a barrister, Tamara spent over six years as a partner in our Commercial team, before transitioning to focus on being a repository for and disseminator of the firm's Knowledge in these crucial area  She is a member of Osborne Clarke's international AI team, and has for many years been involved with the advisory board of the All Party Parliamentary Group on AI.

Tamara values her experience gained from in-house secondments, as acting head of IP for a major retailer, and as acting head of legal for a well-known publishing company. She is a member of Society for Computers & Law, and is a devotee of the New Scientist magazine.
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Luke Maunder

Associate Director

Osborne Clarke

Luke is an Associate Director in our Intellectual Property Disputes team. Aided by his background in computer science and his love of technology, he focuses on supporting clients in the technology sector, and assists in the leadership of the global tech sector group.

Luke's litigation experience encompasses telecoms (across various ETSI and WiFi standards), video encoding, AI / machine learning, quantum computing, encryption, oil exploration and drilling, biodiesel production, LED lighting, beer dispensers, hi-tech medical equipment, as well as entitlement issues.

He also advises leading technology companies on their multi-jurisdiction patent litigation and/or FRAND strategy. His other IP experience includes advising various well-known technology and household appliance companies on trade mark, copyright and advertising disputes. He has substantial knowledge of UK FRAND case law having previously co-hosted a FRAND podcast and having acted in numerous other SEP and FRAND cases for patentees and for implementers.

He also has experience of competition litigation, particularly at the intersection with IP rights, and he has managed cases at all levels of the English Courts (including the IPEC, High Court, Court of Appeal and UK Supreme Court) and in the CAT.

Before joining Osborne Clarke in 2023, Luke acted for ZTE in its 2020 landmark appeal to the UK Supreme Court in its Standard Essential Patent (SEP) and FRAND dispute with Conversant Wireless (having previously acted in Unwired Planet's dispute with Huawei, Samsung and Google). This, and his jurisdiction expertise, led to his work on the first implementer-led FRAND action in the UK (Vestel v Access Advance & Philips) in 2021, as well as to him acting for various other implementers (as well as several patentees) in other SEP and FRAND disputes.  

Luke is a member of the British Computer Society and is the secretary for the IPEC Users' Committee. In his personal time, he enjoys video gaming, adding new tech to his home, and running.

Luke was named as a Rising Star or Notable Practitioner by Managing IP in 2021, 2022 and 2023.
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