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Information Technology Lawyers Worldwide.

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Meet Our Information Technology Lawyers

Discover independent Information Technology legal experts worldwide on Global Law Experts. Explore recognized lawyers and law firms specializing in Information Technology.

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Information Technology
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Information Technology
9 results

Enrico Morello

  • GOLD

Email:

Phone:

+39 34*****
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Enrico Morello

  • GOLD
Information Technology Law in Italy
  • Lexant SBtA a r.l.
  • GOLD

Tina Fernandez

  • GOLD

Email:

Phone:

+44779*****
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Orbital Law logo featuring a stylized planet symbol, representing a law firm's focus on global legal services.

Tina Fernandez

  • GOLD
Information Technology Law in United Kingdom
  • Orbital Law
  • GOLD

Noboru Kitayama

  • GOLD

Email:

Phone:

+81362*****

Noboru Kitayama

  • GOLD

Noboru Kitayama

  • GOLD
Information Technology Law in Japan
  • Mori Hamada & Matsumoto
  • GOLD

Sabine Alvarez Privado

  • GOLD

Email:

Phone:

+43 69*****
  • GOLD

Sabine Alvarez Privado

Sabine Alvarez Privado

  • GOLD
Contract Law in Austria
  • APS-LAW
  • GOLD

Dean Cunningham

  • GOLD

Email:

Phone:

+35387*****
Professional man in a suit with blue tie, posing for a portrait against a light background.
Cunningham Solicitors logo with initials "CS" displayed prominently.
Professional man in a suit with blue tie, posing for a portrait against a light background.

Dean Cunningham

  • GOLD

Dean Cunningham

  • GOLD
Information Technology Law in Ireland
  • Cunningham Solicitors
  • GOLD

Sabine Lipovetsky

  • GOLD

Email:

Phone:

+33 (0*****
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Sabine Lipovetsky

  • GOLD
Information Technology Law in France
  • Harlay Avocats

Richard Gürlich, Ph.D.

  • GOLD

Email:

Phone:

+420 2*****
Richard Gürlich
Gürlich Vítek & Partners
Richard Gürlich

Richard Gürlich, Ph.D.

  • GOLD
Dispute Resolution Law in Czech Republic
  • Gürlich Vítek & Partners

Mark W. Heaphy

  • GOLD

Email:

Phone:

+1 203*****
Mark W. Heaphy
Wiggin and Dana LLP
Mark W. Heaphy

Mark W. Heaphy

  • GOLD

Mark W. Heaphy

  • GOLD
Information Technology Law in USA
  • Wiggin and Dana LLP

Bastiaan Bruyndonckx

  • GOLD

Email:

Phone:

+32 (0*****
Bastiaan Bruyndonckx
Lydian
Bastiaan Bruyndonckx

Bastiaan Bruyndonckx

  • GOLD
Information Technology Law in Belgium
  • Lydian

Information Technology News

Find Expert Information Technology Lawyers Through Global Law Experts

Empower Digital Transformation with Expert Information Technology Counsel

Information Technology (IT) law governs the creation, distribution, and use of digital information and the underlying technological infrastructure. This practice is critical for businesses operating in a data-driven economy, as it navigates the intersection of commercial objectives and stringent regulatory mandates. Attorneys provide the essential framework for structuring Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) agreements, managing complex IT outsourcing (ITO) transitions, and ensuring compliance with evolving global standards such as the EU AI Act and data sovereignty requirements.

Global Law Experts connects you with premier IT specialists who possess the technical fluency required to translate code into contract. These lawyers are established experts within their own fields, offering the tactical foresight needed to handle “Open Source” software audits, negotiate Service Level Agreements (SLAs) with mission-critical benchmarks, and manage the legal risks associated with Blockchain and distributed ledger technologies. Whether you are a legacy enterprise migrating to a hybrid cloud environment or a tech disruptor launching an AI-powered platform, they provide the strategic advocacy needed to protect your digital assets and ensure operational resilience in a rapidly shifting technological landscape.

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We will help match you with a qualified Information Technology law specialist who can offer reliable advice, clarify your options, and guide you through the next steps in the legal process.
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Information Technology FAQ's

An IT lawyer manages the legal intersection of business and technology. They draft and negotiate contracts for software development, cloud computing (SaaS), and data processing. Beyond contracts, they advise on regulatory compliance, such as data privacy laws (GDPR, CCPA), and help protect intellectual property like software code and algorithms. Their goal is to ensure your technology assets are legally secure and that your vendor relationships do not expose you to operational risk.

The “Uptime Guarantee” and “Data Ownership” clauses are paramount. You must ensure the vendor guarantees a specific level of availability (e.g., 99.9%) and defines the penalty if they fail. Data ownership is equally vital; the contract must state that you own all the data you upload and that you can extract it in a usable format if you leave. Other critical clauses include “Indemnification” (protection if their software gets you sued) and “Limitation of Liability” (capping how much they pay you if they destroy your business).

For enterprise software, yes. A standard “click-wrap” EULA is written entirely to protect the vendor. It often gives them the right to audit your systems, limit your usage to specific locations, or terminate your license without cause. A lawyer negotiates these terms to remove “audit traps” that could lead to massive fines and ensures the license scope matches your actual business usage (e.g., allowing contractors to use the software).

A lawyer builds a “legal firewall” around your liability. They draft vendor contracts that force third parties to maintain strict security standards and hold them financially responsible if they cause a breach. Internally, they create an “Incident Response Plan” that defines exactly how you legally notify regulators and customers after a hack. Following this plan creates a defensible legal position if you are later sued for negligence.

The main risk is “viral” licensing (like the GPL). If you include this type of code in your proprietary software, you may be legally forced to make your entire source code public for free. A lawyer conducts an “OSS Audit” to identify every open-source component in your stack. They ensure you are only using “permissive” licenses (like MIT or Apache) that allow you to keep your product closed-source and commercial.

A lawyer ensures the SLA has teeth. Instead of vague promises, they define “Service Credits”—automatic refunds you receive if the vendor misses performance targets. They also define “Severity Levels” (e.g., Severity 1 = total outage) and attach specific response times to each. Crucially, they negotiate a “Termination for Chronic Failure” clause, allowing you to walk away from the contract penalty-free if the vendor repeatedly misses their targets.

Yes, specifically regarding “Transition” and “Exit” planning. When you outsource IT, the biggest risk is getting locked in. A lawyer drafts detailed “Transition-In” milestones to ensure the vendor takes over smoothly. More importantly, they draft a “Termination Assistance” clause that legally forces the vendor to help you move your data and services to a new provider when the contract ends, preventing them from holding your operations hostage.

Copyright law generally defaults to the creator, not the person paying. If you hire a freelancer without a written contract, they own the code, and you only have a license to use it. To own the software you paid for, a lawyer must draft a “Work Made for Hire” agreement or a specific “IP Assignment” deed. This legally transfers the copyright from the developer’s mind to your company’s balance sheet.

Information Technology FAQ's

An IT lawyer manages the legal intersection of business and technology. They draft and negotiate contracts for software development, cloud computing (SaaS), and data processing. Beyond contracts, they advise on regulatory compliance, such as data privacy laws (GDPR, CCPA), and help protect intellectual property like software code and algorithms. Their goal is to ensure your technology assets are legally secure and that your vendor relationships do not expose you to operational risk.

The "Uptime Guarantee" and "Data Ownership" clauses are paramount. You must ensure the vendor guarantees a specific level of availability (e.g., 99.9%) and defines the penalty if they fail. Data ownership is equally vital; the contract must state that you own all the data you upload and that you can extract it in a usable format if you leave. Other critical clauses include "Indemnification" (protection if their software gets you sued) and "Limitation of Liability" (capping how much they pay you if they destroy your business).

For enterprise software, yes. A standard "click-wrap" EULA is written entirely to protect the vendor. It often gives them the right to audit your systems, limit your usage to specific locations, or terminate your license without cause. A lawyer negotiates these terms to remove "audit traps" that could lead to massive fines and ensures the license scope matches your actual business usage (e.g., allowing contractors to use the software).

A lawyer builds a "legal firewall" around your liability. They draft vendor contracts that force third parties to maintain strict security standards and hold them financially responsible if they cause a breach. Internally, they create an "Incident Response Plan" that defines exactly how you legally notify regulators and customers after a hack. Following this plan creates a defensible legal position if you are later sued for negligence.

The main risk is "viral" licensing (like the GPL). If you include this type of code in your proprietary software, you may be legally forced to make your entire source code public for free. A lawyer conducts an "OSS Audit" to identify every open-source component in your stack. They ensure you are only using "permissive" licenses (like MIT or Apache) that allow you to keep your product closed-source and commercial.

A lawyer ensures the SLA has teeth. Instead of vague promises, they define "Service Credits"—automatic refunds you receive if the vendor misses performance targets. They also define "Severity Levels" (e.g., Severity 1 = total outage) and attach specific response times to each. Crucially, they negotiate a "Termination for Chronic Failure" clause, allowing you to walk away from the contract penalty-free if the vendor repeatedly misses their targets.

Yes, specifically regarding "Transition" and "Exit" planning. When you outsource IT, the biggest risk is getting locked in. A lawyer drafts detailed "Transition-In" milestones to ensure the vendor takes over smoothly. More importantly, they draft a "Termination Assistance" clause that legally forces the vendor to help you move your data and services to a new provider when the contract ends, preventing them from holding your operations hostage.

Copyright law generally defaults to the creator, not the person paying. If you hire a freelancer without a written contract, they own the code, and you only have a license to use it. To own the software you paid for, a lawyer must draft a "Work Made for Hire" agreement or a specific "IP Assignment" deed. This legally transfers the copyright from the developer's mind to your company's balance sheet.

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