Frequently Asked Questions

We assist a range of IT clients such as software developers, cloud service providers, digital platforms, and emerging tech startups to address their legal needs.

Our team drafts and negotiates software and technology licensing agreements that address key deliverables, usage rights, maintenance terms, and liability clauses.

We provide guidance on Canadian federal and provincial privacy laws including PIPEDA, and help implement privacy by design principles to secure user data.

Yes. We draft and review cloud service contracts, service level agreements, and vendor partnerships to ensure clear performance metrics and liability allocation.

Our team applies best practices in data protection and confidentiality to ensure client information is handled in strict accordance with Canadian privacy statutes and industry standards. We implement clear protocols for secure document exchange, retention schedules, and controlled access to sensitive files, so IT firms can focus on innovation without concerns over data handling.

NetJuris assists in drafting and negotiating licensing agreements for software, SaaS platforms, and proprietary code. We tailor every clause to align with your development lifecycle, business objectives, and compliance requirements, ensuring clarity on scope, usage rights, and ongoing support obligations.

Yes. We prepare customized employment contracts, independent contractor agreements, and equity incentive documents that address confidentiality, ownership of work product, non-compete and non-solicitation provisions, all drafted with an understanding of the dynamics in technology organizations.

For a routine software development or consulting agreement, our standard delivery timeline is 10 to 15 business days from receipt of all required information. We can often expedite that schedule when project parameters are clearly defined up front.

We guide clients through Canadian provincial and federal regulations as well as international data transfer frameworks. Our advice covers data residency, cross-border storage, vendor due diligence and privacy impact assessments to support multi-jurisdictional operations.