ABOUT
I often visit museums and art shows. I love programming languages and ancient languages.
I can never rest to enjoy the results.
I plan all the time.
In 1993 I founded my firm, Studio Turini,which has a group of excellent professionals, mostly female.
We assist companies in protecting their ideas, defending their trademarks, patents, designs, copyright and software.
I manage Ufficiobrevetti.it, which I’ve created more than twenty years ago to make intellectual property protection accessible to everyone.
I’ve worked as a journalist for Il Sole24Ore, Millionaire, Internet News and RAI. At the moment I write about innovation and artificial intelligence in Stefano Feltri’s newsletter called Appunti,
Since 2012 I am Editor in chief of the online magazine Brevettinews.it, which I founded in the same year with the goal of spreading knowledge and insights on this field, as it is useful to everyone because we are all creative.
What guides me, and always has, is the curiosity toward all that is new and for everything that has no set rules.
This is why I was one of the first attorneys at law to deal with domain names recovery and internet law, and why I published a monography on the topic in 2000.
Today, this curiosity has brought me to dedicate my time to study and analyze new technologies and their legal implications, among which NFTs, blockchain and artificial intelligence.
During these years I attended many training courses, among which those in Legal Tech, Coding for Lawyer, AI and blockchain of the Università Statale di Milano, and advanced courses in new technologies such as Big Data, Artificial Intelligence and platforms.
With the never-ending evolution of artificial intelligence, that changes, grows and pervades our daily life, I’ve decided to begin a new editorial project which consists in a newsletter and a podcast.
You will find a little of history, technical information, but mainly news and updates on the current trends, observing with optimism and hope the world that awaits us, of which we want to capture the positive aspects without forgetting the critical ones.
There is still so much we don’t know about artificial intelligence, how it works, its internal rules and the implications with industrial property rights and copyrights.
I think it is time to find it out.