New technologies law

From autonomous cars to AI and care robots - expertise for current legal practice

Disruptive technologies are increasingly becoming the focus of legal attention. However, there is often a lack of relevant case law. Law is therefore in demand and is increasingly presenting studies. This involves, for example, the legal assessment of AI and machine learning, legal tech, big data and the Internet of Things. Autonomous driving raises new legal issues, as do smart homes and robotics in care and medicine. If you want to stay up to date in legal practice relating to new technologies or even want to gain an intellectual edge - for example in the complex of questions relating to the autonomy of IT systems - this module is just right for you.

Teachers


Prof Dr Michael Denga, LL.M.

 

Profile and main areas of work


Alexis von Kruedener

Attorney at Law

Profile and main practice areas

Mentor


Simonié Schlombs

Attorney at Law

Profile and specialisations

Your gain in expertise

Participants in the module can ...

understand the currently most important disruptions and their potential.

quickly access the legal problems of the respective technologies.

Identify overarching problems and legal solutions.

recognise interdisciplinary approaches and interdependencies.

acquire basic ethical knowledge and sustainability aspects.

Further education at a glance

University certificate

Certificate of Advanced Studies (CAS)

Dates

The module starts on 5 May
and ends on 7 September 2026

On-site workshop in Berlin
12/13 June

Workshop online
24/25 July

Time required and scope

8-10 hours per week, 10 credit points

Teaching format

Online plus two compact workshops at the weekend

Prerequisites

None

Costs

1,500 euros plus university fee

Who is the programme aimed at?

You've come to the right place if you want to position yourself as a specialist in the law of new technologies. The module is aimed at:

  • Lawyers
  • Business economists and business administrators
  • Computing scientists with legal knowledge

The programme can be taken as certified further education or as part of a part-time degree programme in information law. It concludes with a Certificate of Advanced Studies. If the admission requirements are met, the certificate is fully recognised for the Master's degree programme. So you can start your studies without enrolment!

Warum Teilnehmende uns empfehlen

Praxisnah

Projekte aus dem eigenen Beruf können in den einzelnen Modulen bearbeitet werden und lassen sich als Prüfungsleistung einbringen. 

Flexibel

Lernen, wenn es zu Familie, Job und Freizeit passt – das Studienformat macht es möglich. Studiert wird überwiegend online.

Persönlich

Unsere Lehrenden begleiten Sie intensiv und geben individuelles Feedback. In Kleingruppen tauschen Sie sich mit anderen Studierenden aus.

 

Universitär

Unsere Studierenden profitieren von exzellenter Forschung und Lehre. Alle Inhalte spiegeln den aktuellen wissenschaftlichen Stand.

Bleiben Sie gut informiert!

Folgen Sie uns auf LinkedIn, erweitern Sie Ihr Netzwerk und diskutieren Sie mit uns rund um das Thema Informationsrecht:

Beratung und Kontakt

Nadine Dembski

Managerin für Wissenschaftliche Weiterbildung
Informationsrecht 
 

T +49 (0)441 / 798 23 75

www.uol.de/informationsrecht

 

I would like to receive news and
about further education

Ich interessiere mich für

I consent to the processing of data in accordance with the data protection guidelines of the Center for Lifelong Learning (C3L) in conjunction with § 17 NHG. and agree to C3L informing me regularly about educational offers. I can revoke this consent at any time.

Data protection notice

The data you submitted to this form will be deleted after a period of 180 days.

Visit the C3L here as well:

(Changed: 29 Apr 2026)  Kurz-URL:Shortlink: https://uol.de/p100031en
Zum Seitananfang scrollen Scroll to the top of the page

This page contains automatically translated content.