
Jeremy Malcolm
Tech-savvy New York attorney specializing in IP, Internet & AI law and policy
I am Jeremy Malcolm, a tech-savvy attorney who was admitted to the New York Bar in 2009. I offer legal services remotely, covering all areas of law with a particular focus on intellectual property, Internet, and AI law. My deep understanding of emerging technologies allows me to provide strategic guidance on complex legal issues that arise at the intersection of law and innovation. My practice includes copyright, trademarks, privacy, cybersecurity, and regulatory compliance in the digital landscape... but I thrive on the diversity of my practice, so yes I can also handle your divorce, will, or criminal defense.
I am adept at advising startups, creators, and tech companies, combining legal acumen with technical insight to deliver effective solutions in an evolving legal environment. I am also the founder of AskLex.ai, a unique AI-enabled online legal advice service that allows you to have AI legal answers reviewed by a real lawyer.
I was first admitted to practice law in Australia in 1996 and later in New York in 2009. I am the author of "Multi-Stakeholder Governance and the Internet Governance Forum" (2008), and I serve as the Chair of the Center for Online Safety and Liberty.
- Murdoch University
- Ph.D. (2008) | Law
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- Activities: Thesis on "Multi-Stakeholder Public Policy Governance and its Application to the Internet Governance Forum"
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- Murdoch University
- LL.D. (1994) | Law
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- Honors: Honors
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- Certified Payments & Fraud Prevention Professional
- Merchant Risk Council (MRC)
- Australian Open Source Award
- Australian Unix and Open Systems Users Group (AUUG)
- For outstanding contribution to the understanding of para-technical and legal issues.
- Center for Online Safety and Liberty
- Chair
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- New York
- New York State Office of Court Administration
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- High Court of Australia
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- Supreme Court of Western Australia
- ID Number: 2507786
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- Free Consultation
- Credit Cards Accepted
- Communications & Internet Law
- Internet Law, Media & Advertising, Telecommunications Law
- Trademarks
- Trademark Litigation, Trademark Registration
- Intellectual Property
- Probate
- Probate Administration, Probate Litigation, Will Contests
- Criminal Law
- Criminal Appeals, Fraud, Internet Crimes, Sex Crimes
- Business Law
- Business Contracts, Business Dissolution, Business Formation, Business Litigation, Partnership & Shareholder Disputes
- Family Law
- Adoption, Child Custody, Child Support, Father's Rights, Guardianship & Conservatorship, Paternity, Prenups & Marital Agreements, Restraining Orders, Same Sex Family Law
- English: Spoken, Written
- Spanish: Written
- Q. Is it legal to use AI to flag illegal content and store it for review on a US-based free-speech platform?
- A: Great question! Flagging the content for 24 hours for review is not going to trigger liability for you, because at that point the legal status of the content is still pending verification, and you haven't obtained actual notice of anything illegal. But once you do verify it and find that it is or may be illegal, that triggers your responsibility under 18 U.S.C. § 2258A, to report it to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC). The law does not require that a platform be in active collaboration with law enforcement but mandates reporting if CSAM is detected.. At that point, you are still required to maintain the content in an offline archive for 12 months in case ... Read More
- Website
- Jeremy Malcolm: Internet & AI Law & Policy