Amber Melville-Brown

  • News

    Leveson: overview

    08 April 2013

    2010 was full of vociferous comment on the libel reform campaign; 2011 gave us Ryan Giggs and ‘superinjunction spring’. And 2012 provided the finer detail of the phone-hacking scandal and the resulting Leveson Inquiry. Anyone browsing the array of domestic newspapers over the last few years would be forgiven for ...

  • News

    The need to protect privacy

    2012-11-01T00:00:00

    Serious public interest issues have been played out in the court and the media over the past few months. I write, of course, about the royal buttocks of Prince Harry, the regal breasts of his sister-in-law the Duchess of Cambridge and the extra-marital activities of the former England football manager ...

  • News

    The Leveson Inquiry

    2012-04-13T00:00:00

    The government announced plans last month to bring an end to the use of wild animals in travelling circuses in England. Great news for animal lovers concerned by the risk of mistreatment and cruelty to animals. But will it herald the demise of this unique entertainment event? If so, help ...

  • News

    Max Mosley, the media and UK privacy laws

    2011-05-19T00:00:00

    What better evening to launch the second edition of Tugendhat and Christie’s The Law of Privacy and the Media than the day on which the European Court of Human Rights handed down its hotly anticipated decision in Mosley v the United Kingdom?

  • News

    Redefining the defence of fair comment

    2011-02-10T00:00:00

    Most parents have experienced the plaintive cry of ‘it’s not fair!’ hurled from the mouths of offspring made to tidy their rooms or deprived of the must-have of the moment.

  • News

    Injunctions and protecting private information

    2010-12-02T00:00:00

    Adakini Ntuli v Howard Donald [2010] EWCA Civ 1276 – ‘Why shud I continue 2 suffer financially 4 the sake of loyalty when selling my story will sort my life out?’

  • News

    Media: British Chiropractic Association v Dr Simon Singh

    2010-04-22T00:00:00

    While the northern hemisphere is paralysed by the seismic shift that has caused the Icelandic volcano, Mt Eyjafjallajökull, to erupt, the case of the British Chiropractic Association (BCA) against Dr Simon Singh promises to have an equally seismic effect on the legal landscape of libel in the UK and the ...

  • News

    Media law: protecting informants

    2010-01-21T00:00:00

    Financial Times Limited and others v United Kingdom (application number 821/03), 15 December 2009.From time to time, an anonymous brown paper envelope finds its way mysteriously onto a reporter’s desk. That envelope contains leaked confidential documents telling a hell of a good story. The story sees the light of day; ...

  • News

    Media: is Google a publisher or merely a facilitator?

    2009-09-24T00:00:00

    A Google search is the first port of call for many of us when researching anything online. Indeed, according to Wikipedia, Google receives several hundred million queries each day. The Google engine searches an index of web pages, compiled and updated by Google automatically, and provides access to the sites ...

  • News

    Internet publication and freedom of expression

    2009-05-14T00:00:00

    The long-standing principle of ‘publish and be damned’ is jealously guarded by the media. But when it comes to publications on the internet, a recent decision of the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) shows that those who publish there may find themselves being damned for ever and a day.

  • News

    Media law – offers of amends

    2009-02-19T00:00:00

    Warren v Random House Group Ltd (Nos 1-3) (CA) [2008] EWCA Civ 834; Tesco Stores Ltd v Guardian News & Media Ltd and Rusbridger [2008] EWCH (QB)

  • News

    Media: danger in the detail

    2008-11-13T00:00:00

    We are all told to pay attention to detail at school and as lawyers it is paramount. Many a case has been won when a tiny, apparently trifling detail has been uncovered, often at the last minute.

  • News

    Mosley’s win: a slightly larger private world

    2008-08-07T00:00:00

    The implementation of the Human Rights Act 1998 incorporated into UK law article 8, guaranteeing the right to respect for private and family life, and its arch rival article 10, ­protecting the right to freedom of expression. Max Mosley’s hotly ­contested privacy action was the battlefield for the latest high-profile ...

  • News

    Privacy and Mrs Murray

    2008-06-19T00:00:00

    'The law should indeed protect children from intrusive media attention.'

  • News

    Accidents happen – but what can be published?

    2008-06-19T00:00:00

    Media law update: PCC privacy adjudication, Paul Kirkland and Wiltshire Gazette & Herald