Legal updates and opinions
News / News
China: motivation for e-commerce to act against counterfeiting
By Janine Hollesen and Donvay Wegierski, Directors
On 31 August 2018, China introduced legislation making online operations accountable. Online service providers who fail to monitor their websites for counterfeit product face hefty fines of 1 January 2019.
Alibaba.com the world’s largest online store, already has anti-counterfeiting alliances with international brands including Samsung and Louis Vuitton. With China’s online sales of around one trillion US dollars per year, this new measure can only be welcomed by brand owners.
Latest News
A double-edged sword: revenge porn and the Cybercrimes Act
Recently, South Africa has been experiencing a barrage of cyber-attacks and/or cyber-related/enabled crimes, with many individuals and organisations being caught [...]
When is CTC not available as CTC?: Part 2
In the September 2022 edition of Legal Weks we published an article titled "When is CTC not available as CTC" [...]
The test for merger specificity restated and endorsed
As part of the merger notification process, merging parties must disclose whether the merger will or even has caused job [...]
Half-baked challenge by employees dismissed for testing positive for cannabis at work
In a 2018 judgement by the Constitutional Court, the highest Court in the land effectively decriminalised the private use, cultivation [...]
Riding Off Into The Sunset – Labour Appeal Court Settles Questions On Retirement Age
by Kerry Fredericks, Director There is no specified retirement age for employees in terms of South African law. Employers are, [...]
Tsunami of a Penalty as “Lucky Monopolist” gets Unlucky
by Rudolph Raath, Director and Nokwanda Zondi, Candidate Attorney In a rare display of its utmost displeasure, the Competition Tribunal [...]