Took dinner last night @ChapterOneByMV and had the tasting menu ‘blind’. Believe the hype - it is next level dining.

If it isn’t a three star venue in the next round or shortly thereafter I’ll be quite surprised.
Sometimes a tasting menu can be risky as you mightn’t like everything on it, particularly if you don’t read the menu beforehand. That didn’t occur.

The canapés were excellent including a much enjoyed Mossfield Gouda from County Offaly, and an unusual spoon presented radish bite.
The service was impeccable, as was the food - end-to-end. The Kolonne Null Riesling 2020 - Edition Axel Pauly was also great to know about (remarkably drinkable NA Riesling).

Well done! 🔥
This review by @jozeemac pretty accurately captures what I thought as well: irishexaminer.com/food/arid-4037…

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More from @ronanlupton

12 Sep
The CJEU hears a case entitled G.D. tomorrow involving the retention of call data, under the Communications (Retention of Data) Act, 2011.
This 2011 Act mandates the retention of raw telephone call data for a period of 2 years; and
Internet metadata for a period of 1 year.
It replaced section 63 of the Criminal Justice (Terrorist Offences) Act 2005 which mandated retention for 3 years in time.
The 2011 Act, was a piece of primary legislation debated fully in the Oireachtas, with noted principles and policies that was designed inter alia to give effect to the Data Retention Enforcement Directive 2006/24/EC.
Read 13 tweets
3 Nov 20
@maireadenright has an interesting and thought provoking piece in the Times today.

Stasi archive shows way for institutional abuse record-keeping irishtimes.com/opinion/stasi-…
When one tracks the very basis for Privacy and shortly later on Data Protection rights and law in the European Union, one need only look to the aftermath of World War II the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) in 1948; and in 1950 the ECHR.
Data protection coming in the 1970s with the German State of Hesse adopting the first DP law, followed by Sweden in 1973 and FR, DE, NL and UK in the 1980s. The COE adopting Convention 108 in 1981.
Read 7 tweets
2 Nov 20
This is an important amendment and one which to my mind closes off a fairly significant legislative unintended consequence.
Any amendment should cater for scenarios where the child is possibly a stranger to the accused. Side step guarded anonymity and possible jigsaw identification from pre charge reporting. This is tricky, but this draft seems to work.
I see that @SenatorMcDowell also has an amendment that also makes some sensible suggestions.
Read 4 tweets
24 Oct 20
On every side of a case there is a right, a believed truth, and a position. In many instances the only way to resolve who is actually right in fact or at law, is to litigate the particular issue.
Litigation comes with great burdens. Two such burdens (and there are many more) being cost and the exposure of matters and people in open court that ordinarily may not wish for such outings. Take for example a defamation, injury, or a tragic loss.
Courts too, are not infallible. So, often the most complicated of cases only become resolved at appellate level, and where matters of European Union law arise that are not so obvious or clear, they must be referred to the Court of Justice in Luxembourg.
Read 12 tweets
12 Jul 20
This Thursday sees judgment in Facebook Ireland and Schrems in
Case C-311/18 at 09:30 CET.
The case was controversial for a number of reasons. First, SCCs - Standard Contractual Clauses, the now outdated clauses that undertakings can use for cross border data flows Decision 2010/87; and
Second, Privacy Shield. Which is an agreement between the US and EU from July 2016 concerning data transfers.
Read 10 tweets

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