US drone laws will become a template for other jurisdictions, say US lawyers.
Trinidad and Tobago has become the latest state to decide to introduce rules stopping the free flight of drones - as a matter of urgency in response to a surge in their use.
How will the law cope with robot relationships, asks Chrissie Lightfoot?
China is preparing to become a world robotics power.
Employers need a wake-up call as disruptive technologies take control of the workplace.
Brian O'Neill QC and Scott Ivill of 2 Hare Court, Temple in London, look at the individual and corporate criminal liability of robots.
Copyright protection for works created by robots may not be available in the EU.
Patents are a fast-track way of getting funding or increasing company value.
Hobbyists operating drones in a public space have come under scrutiny.
Protecting personal data is one of the key issues for CNIL when it concerns connected cars or drones.
Regulators are missing a number of key issues connected with driverless cars.
US states are looking at new rules for drone regulation but, says Thomas Haun, a unified framework is the ideal solution.
The potential integration of drones into the aviation system is just one of the initiatives Singapore is looking into.
The UK's financial services regulator is looking into using AI for pensions advice.
Litigation over copyright on works created by robots and A1 is a key risk for companies in Europe.
France is taking action to protect its citizens from drone privacy intrusions.
The arrival of driverless cars in cities could be contentious unless carefully thought out, says the OECD.
Q&A with Llewellyn Boyer-Cartwright, partner in Bahamas law firm Callenders and a former commercial airline pilot. The Bahamas, located east of Florida, is made up of about 700 islands.
Safeguards will need to be developed lest robots become too powerful.
Fears about jobs in the UK are clouding the excitement over new technologies.