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Future Mobility: A New Frontier

Connected and autonomous vehicles will soon be a reality, and electric mobility will be brought to the masses. But regulators need to step in to resolve legal, technical and ethical quandaries. This special report explores the issues that will underpin our new MLex Future Mobility service.

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October 2021



The imminent arrival of truly self-driving and connected cars, automated household devices and smart networks poses ethical and regulatory questions now: The challenge of framing the digital transformation in laws, principles and regulation is already keenly felt and growing every day.

Vehicles are the next “connected device,” and this raises questions over how we should frame this shift in the regulation of privacy, artificial intelligence, liability, data transfer, connectivity, operating systems, patents, cybersecurity and encryption.

The regulatory foundations are being set for a shift that will ultimately transform societies and economies. Alongside this come newly galvanized efforts to wean mankind off the internal combustion engine and promote cleaner energies, fewer emissions and electric charging, meaning a multitude of risks and opportunities are emerging in the energy sector.

In light of this rapidly evolving regulatory landscape, MLex has launched a new area of reporting, designed to keep our readers ahead of the curve when it comes to legal and policy developments across the globe: MLex Future Mobility.
 

Download your free copy today. 

 

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