Julia advises clients on all aspects of intellectual property and media law, with particular expertise in broadcasting and digital content and interactive entertainment sectors.
Julia regularly advises businesses in the Technology Media and Communications sector on a range of commercial and technology issues, and various topics related notably to copyright, trademark, publicity, advertising and gaming law and regulations, on both contentious and non-contentious matters.
She also advises on various aspects of media regulation and production from both traditional and new media perspective, with a thorough understanding of the regulations governing online content.
Julia is a lecturer since 2017 at the HEAD law school (Paris) on the digital platform regulations, with a focus on their liability as intermediary and their obligations of transparency and accountability.
Julia was admitted to the Paris bar in November 2012. She holds a Master 2 degree in Literary, Artistic and Industrial Property Law from Paris II – Panthéon Assas University.
She joined Osborne Clarke in 2013.
Julia Darcel is very open in communication and has a very practical approach. She truly informs the client about advantages and disadvantages of the case and looks for a right solution. She is very cooperative and open to discussions.
Insights
Looking back at the press publisher right to fair compensation in 2023 and looking forward to 2024
Age assurance is focus of European regulatory action for online protection of minors
European Commission takes a step forward in the fight against online piracy of sports and other live events
Hosting third-party products could make online marketplaces liable for trade mark infringement
The streaming war intensifies with the rise of FAST
France leads on specific regulation for influencers and the EU may follow
Game over for second-hand game sales in France
Commission notified of France's mandatory parental controls on internet devices
France makes parental controls mandatory on internet-connected devices
European institutions contemplate the metaverse and its policy challenges
European Parliament Research Service paper considers regulation by adapting the existing digital world policy framework
EU gets one step closer to adopting the Digital Services Act
New regulation of digital services expected to come into force for all businesses in late 2023