Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

DIFC Courts issues rules for robots, drones, AI and fintech

DIFC Dubai Media Office
While this robotic Dubai police officer is on the right side of the law, DIFC Courts will hear digital business disputes, ranging from AI to blockchain issues

The Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC) Courts has issued a fresh set of rules designed to address digital business disputes across the emirate.

The rules range from big data, blockchain, artificial intelligence, fintech and cloud services, to unmanned aerial vehicles, 3D printing and robotics.

Established in 2004, the DIFC Courts is the English language, independent, common law legal system for the DIFC free zone, the emirate’s main financial hub.

In December last year it announced the launch of a Digital Economy Court (DEC) Division, aimed at simplifying the settlement process of complex civil and commercial disputes related to the digital economy.

Following the announcement, a global panel of lawyers and industry experts were tasked to draft and confirm new specialised rules, which were also subject to a 30-day public consultation.

The rules will lead to the swift resolution of digital economy disputes through an artificial intelligence-driven platform, making use of digital systems as part of the court’s paperless strategy.

Justice Omar Al Mheiri, director at DIFC Courts, said: “With the digital economy fast emerging as a prime accelerant of global business, these specialised rules have been engineered to strengthen our mission of building a courts system that not only absorbs current dispute resolution needs but can flex to address and resolve new emerging disputes.

“This strategy has been further reinforced by ensuring we blend leading judicial expertise with innovative technological implementations,” he added.

Justice Michael Black from the UK has been appointed to oversee the Digital Economy Court Division.

The total number of cases that came before the DIFC Courts across all its divisions grew 10 percent year-on-year in the first half of 2022, with a total value of AED 1.9 billion.

Latest articles

UAE nuclear energy plant

Second nuclear power plant planned for UAE

A second nuclear power plant is being planned by the UAE, which would double the current number of reactors in the country to eight. The plant will be tendered within a few months and construction could start later this year, to reach operational readiness in 2032, sources told Reuters. The UAE’s energy minister, Suhail Al […]

DMCC CEO Ahmed Bin Sulayem says there is 'there is plenty of untapped potential' for UAE trade with Japan

Dubai free zone looks to build on UAE-Japan trade

A Dubai free zone has concluded a trade roadshow in Japan as the UAE looks to increase non-oil bilateral trade, which was worth nearly $7.5 billion in the first half of 2023. Dubai Multi-Commodities Centre (DMCC) said its first Made for Trade Live roadshow in Japan focused on web3, gaming and artificial intelligence. DMCC contributes […]

Executives from the UAE's Edge Group and Brazil's Condor sign the stake acquisition deal

UAE’s Edge Group buys stake in tear gas manufacturer

The UAE’s state-owned defence company Edge Group has acquired 51 percent of a Brazilian company which specialises in the manufacture of non-lethal technologies (NLT) such as tear gas and rubber bullets. Condor Non-Lethal Technologies (Condor) has presence in more than 85 countries and is the world’s largest producer of tear gas and related products for […]