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European Commission consults on EU DSA trusted flagger guidelines: designation criteria, technical processes, independence safeguards, transparency, suspension; responses by 26 June 2026; final guidelines H2 2026

Commission launches call for feedback on draft guidelines for trusted flaggers The European Commission is seeking input and comments on provisional guidance concerning trusted flaggers under the EU Digital Services Act. Trusted flaggers are organisations with expertise in detecting unlawful content online......

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HRA 2026–28 AI plan for UK health research: when activities require review, lawful data use for recruitment, and consistent, rigorous ethics oversight

The Health Research Authority (HRA) has unveiled its 2026–28 strategy, outlining how it will support AI use across health and social care research, whilst ensuring suitable protections and safeguards are appropriately maintained......

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TMT weekly highlights: UK–Australia AI security partnership; self-driving pilots; NIS2 templates; Ofcom Online Safety Act enforcement; trade mark and defamation judgments; EU 2 GHz MSS reform; ASA rulings.

In this issue: New technologies Information technology Internet Media Advertising, marketing and sponsorship Reputation management Telecommunications LexTalk®TMT: a Lexis®Nexis community Daily and weekly news alerts New and updated content Dates for your diary Trackers Useful information New technologies DSIT announces UK-Australia AI security partnership The Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) says the UK AI Security Institute (AISI) and its Australian counterpart have signed a memorandum of understanding to deepen co-operation on AI safety and security risks. The arrangement will see both AISIs exchange insights on frontier AI capabilities, work jointly on research into emerging risks, and shape best practices for testing and evaluating AI systems. It also envisages staff secondments between the institutes to strengthen day-to-day collaboration. See: LNB News 26/05/2026 41. DfT opens applications for operators to join...

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CMA secures High Court–endorsed undertakings from Emma Sleep over misleading urgency claims and discounts, with compliance monitoring; legality of ‘was/now’ pricing to be determined in June 2026

The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) announced it had obtained a High Court–approved settlement from Emma Sleep after the firm admitted to breaching consumer law. According to the CMA, Emma Sleep also used misleading countdown clocks, false claims of high demand, and deceptive discount promotions......

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Privacy and misuse of private information—overview

Privacy law in the UK consists of several strands:

  • the right to respect for private and family life in Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), brought into UK law by the Human Rights Act 1998 (HRA 1998)
  • the tort of misuse of private information, protecting people from unjustified intrusion (Campbell v MGN)
  • provisions of the Protection from Harassment Act 1997 (PHA 1997), which protect individual privacy

There is no single, overarching right to privacy in English law. However, the HRA 1998 and the incorporation of Article 8 into domestic law mean aspects of private life can be shielded from unwarranted interference.

Right to a private and family life


Article 8(1) of the ECHR safeguards a person’s right to respect for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence. At its core lie society’s values of human dignity and autonomy; effective protection of Article 8 enables individuals to direct their own lives and to form relationships. Strasbourg jurisprudence is vital for understanding the scope of Article 8 rights and, therefore, how and when...

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