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About Me

hi everyone, welcome to our blog.we, the authors are the 2nd year law students from the Faculty of Law, National University Malaysia. this blog, which is basically on jurisdiction in cyberspace is created as a requirements for the Cyber law course under the observation of our respected lecturer Dr. Nazura Abdul manap. kindly visit our blog and give comments. Thank you

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Internet Governance - Jurisdiction

Internet Governance - Legal Basket, Real vs Cyber Law Approach

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

JURISDICTION IN CYBERSPACE


William Gibson, the hip science fiction author, supposedly coined the term "cyberspace." According to Gibson, cyberspace is the "place" between two modems. In other words, cyberspace is where the Internet is "located." This electronic "realm" does not occupy any corporeal area, except perhaps to the extent that it relies on hardware such as computer equipment and telephone wires. Whether or not you consider cyberspace a "real" place, many business owners are finding that there is much money to be made through Internet commerce.
Unfortunately, cyberspace is not Eden. Instead, the Internet is frequented by people, and wherever you find people, you are bound to find disputes. Our American system of jurisprudence uses lawsuits as one method of resolving disputes. This method includes a concept known as jurisdiction.
Most often, lawsuits are still conducted the old-fashioned way, which means that the parties physically appear in court to present their case. Generally, cases are not yet presented in cyberspace. Some day, that will probably change. Until then, if you are conducting business outside your home state, whether in cyberspace or otherwise, you need to know about jurisdiction.
Jurisdiction refers to a court’s power to compel you to physically appear in a distant forum to defend or prosecute a lawsuit. In America, all courts’ jurisdictional powers are limited in two ways--by due process and by state statutes known as Long-Arm Acts.
Due Process is embodied in the United States Constitution and in the constitutions of all the states, including Illinois. Basically, due process provides that a court cannot force people (or businesses) to physically appear in a state to defend a lawsuit unless it would be fair to make them
do so. Whether it would be fair depends on several factors, including (1) the relationship between the dispute and the parties’ contacts with the state where the lawsuit is pending and (2) whether, under the circumstances, the defendants reasonably should have expected that they might have to appear in that state to defend a lawsuit.
As mentioned above, Long-Arm Acts are the second check on a court’s jurisdictional power. Long-Arm Acts (as in "the long arm of the law") specify the kind of conduct for which a nonresident defendant might have to appear in court and defend. Usually, this conduct includes soliciting or transacting business within the state or committing a wrongful, harmful act within the state. Because widespread use of the Internet for business is a relatively new phenomenon, the courts are now just starting to decide whether business solicited or conducted entirely in cyberspace (such as by email or through a Web site) is conducted "within" a state as defined by a state’s Long-Arm Act, and if so, whether a court may fairly exercise its jurisdictional power consistent with due process.
Whether someone’s conduct could enable a court to exercise its jurisdictional power (in cyberspace or otherwise) may be difficult to determine. Just as no two deals are necessarily identical, each case involving jurisdiction depends on its particular facts. Even worse, different courts sometimes reach different conclusions when presented with similar or identical facts. Therefore, you need to analyze the outcomes of past cases within specific states to predict whether your conduct in cyberspace could give a distant court power over you. Here are some examples:
The Blue Note Case. The Blue Note jazz club in Missouri maintains a Web site that only gives viewers information about the club. (In other words, the site is passive, rather than interactive. An interactive site might, for example, enable viewers to download information or buy tickets.) The site also states that it is intended for use only by Missouri residents. Nevertheless, a New York club filed suit in New York against the Missouri club, claiming that the Missouri club’s use of the name "Blue Note" infringed on the New York club’s trademark rights in that same name. A New York court held that it did not have jurisdiction over the Missouri club because the Missouri club’s Web site was passive and was expressly intended only for use by Missouri residents.
The Inset Case. When analyzing a passive Web site, the court in this case reached a conclusion that was the opposite of Blue Note (that is, the distant forum state could have jurisdiction over the nonresident business that owned the Web site). The only difference was that in Inset, the Web site was not expressly limited to local residents and listed a national toll-free telephone number.
The Maritz Case. In this trademark infringement case, a court decided that the nonresident defendant’s establishment of its interactive Web site constituted a wrongful, harmful act within Missouri because there were 131 separate transmissions from that site onto computer terminals located in Missouri.
The Zippo Case. Like Maritz, a court in a trademark case decided that a nonresident defendant’s establishment of its interactive Web site constituted a wrongful, harmful act within Pennsylvania because viewers could purchase goods and services through the site.
The American Network Case. In another trademark infringement case, a court held that a nonresident defendant’s establishment of a passive Web site constituted a wrongful, harmful act in New York because the defendant had six New York subscribers out of a base of 7,500 customers.
The Telco Case. In this libel case, a Pennsylvania court determined that a nonresident defendant’s passive Web site caused harm within Pennsylvania because the site specifically mentioned the plaintiff by name.
The Granite Gate Resorts Case. This case shows that government agencies are starting to attempt to enforce their local laws against nonresidents who conduct business on the Internet. Gambling is illegal in Minnesota. Granite Gate Resorts, which has no physical presence in Minnesota, operates an online gambling service that is accessible to Minnesota residents over the Internet. The Minnesota Attorney General recently convinced a Minnesota court to exercise jurisdiction over Granite Gate Resorts, claiming that, by establishing its gambling Web site, Granite Gates has violated Minnesota’s anti-gambling law.
Cases Brought By Foreign Governments. Georgia Tech University (GTU) operates online classes about France. These classes are accessible to Canadian citizens over the Internet. GTU is in hot water with the Quebec government even though GTU has no physical campus in Canada. The Quebec government claims that GTU’s classes, which are only in English, violate Quebec’s requirement that sales of goods and services in Quebec must be presented in both French and English. Similarly, a professor at an American University has run afoul of a town in England. The professor’s online information about that town is available to English subjects over the Internet. That town claims that his reports, which mention that town, violate the United Kingdom’s copyright laws.

Cyber Crime in Malaysia. (What you DON't have to do to get charged)

Cyber crimes. We hear that all the time. Fact is we get all these emails that could lead to fraud, too, most of the time. So what does constitute cyber crime? In this age of wired information, I managed to get to a document posted on the Royal Malaysian Police website. Now, this source should be credible right?

Written by Supt.Lim Hong Shuan, the document goes on to list Cyber Crime as prescribed by the Computer Crimes Act of 1997, Digital Signature act of 1997, and the Telemedicine act of 1997.
What the act outlines and the provisions of each of this act, I cannot get hold of.
But this much I can tell you.
A fellow Malaysian Blogger has been detained since 13th of July 2007 right here in the capital city of Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur. Whats even more interesting is that the team of three law enforcement officers claimed they were from the Federal Unit, Bukit Aman, only to be found out later that Nat (www.jelas.info) was held for investigation in the district headquarters of Dang Wangi.

Details are sketchy, but I have saw Nat's picture, he is not a gangster, and I do not know him to be a criminal either. Heck, he looks more like a librarian! But do visit these sites for more info, Nat is in a circle of friends that work tirelessly to give readers their true account of daily happennings.
Perhaps, it could be one of their stories that has landed him in this predicament.
But since when reporting is a crime? Oooops, does this mean that I am committing one now?

Your guess is as good as mine....You see, you really DON'T have to do much to get into trouble!

Read here, here and here for more on Nat.

cyber crimes










~cyber law in Malaysia~




In fact, compare to US, there are not many laws governing the cyberscape in Malaysia.
Since 1997, some of the cyber laws that have been passed by our Parliament include:
It was reported that the Government would introduce some new cyber laws  including: the Electronic Government Activities Bill and the Personal Data Protection Bill.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

U.S Domestic Jurisdiction

There are 51 governmental entities in the United States, namely the federal government and the 50 state governments. Each entity is sovereign unto itself limited only by constitutional restrictions. Both the federal and state judicial systems have two major divisions of jurisdiction.

1.     Subject-Matter Jurisdiction
        Federal subject-matter jurisdiction is found in Article 3, Section 2 of the U.S Constitution, which states:
        The judicial Power shall extend to all Cases, in Law and Equity, arising under this Constitution, the Laws
        of the United States, and Treaties made...to Controversies to which the United States shall be a Party; -
        to controversies between two or more States; - between a State and Citizens of another State; -
        between Citizens of different States;...and between a State, or the citizens thereof, and foreign States,
        Citizens or Subjects.

        Federal jurisdiction is very broad, extending to all laws passed by Congress, to cases involving
        ambassadors and other foreign diplomatic personnel, to disputes between states, and other related
        areas. Such jurisdiction may be exclusive or concurrent.


        States have exclusive jurisdiction over all cases not granted to the federal government and concurrent
        jurisdiction over cases wherein the federal government has the power to determine a case or controversy
        but elects not to exercise it exclusively.

2.     Jurisdiction over the Parties
        The courts also have the jurisdiction over the parties. They may obtain jurisdiction over the person
        (in personam jurisdiction) by service of process within a state or outside of a state if constitutional rules
        concerning long-arm statutes are adhered to. A court may also assert attachment jurisdiction by
        permitting the seizure of instate property belonging to out-of-state person.

the Uploader and the Downloader

there are 2 activities that are always happen in cyberspace, either putting information into cyberspace or taking information out of cyberspace. At law in cyberspace, people who doing this activities are know as the uploader and the down loader. Under this theory, the uploader and the downloader act like spies in the classic information drop which  the uploader puts information into a location in cyberspace, and the downloader accesses it at a later time. there is no need for both of them to know each one identities. Unlike the classic information, everyone has to communicate with each other in order to share information Some areas of the Internet are accessed by hundreds of thousands of people from all over the world, while others languish as untrodden paving stones on the seemingly infinite paths of cyberspace. 

In both civil and criminal law, most actions taken by uploaders and downloaders present no jurisdictional difficulties. A state can forbid, on its own territory, the uploading and downloading of material it considers harmful to its interests. A state can therefore forbid anyone from uploading a gambling site from its territory, and can forbid anyone within its territory from downloading, i.e. interacting, with a gambling site in cyberspace. For example, the Supreme Court recently declared the "Communications Decency Act" (CDA) unconstitutional for overbreadth and vagueness on a facial challenge, but therefore did not have a chance to address its international implications. Quite apart from the internal limitations of the U.S. Constitution, there is little doubt that, under international law, the United States has the jurisdiction to prescribe law regulating the content of what is uploaded from United States territory. Had the Supreme Court been presented with an actual case or controversy concerning the application of the CDA to a foreign national resident abroad, the Supreme Court would have had to consider the extraterritorial application of the law as written, and could have been expected to apply the presumption against extraterritoriality and to have circumscribed the CDA in that regard. 

in Malaysia, there is no jurisdiction about the down loader. everyone is free to download whatever they want for free especially song. i think there will be strict jurisdiction after this that will be amendment.

The Internet & The Law = C.Y.B.E.R.L.A.W


1.  WHAT IS CYBER LAW?

  • Cyberlaw is is a term that encapsulates the legal issues related to use of communicative, transactional, and distributive aspects of networked information devices and technologies. It is less a distinct field of law than property or contract law, as it is a domain covering many areas of law and regulation. Some leading topics include intellectual property, privacy, freedom of expression, and jurisdiction.  
  • Information Technology LawIT Law) is a set of recent legal enactments, currently in existence in several countries, which governs the process and dissemination of information digitally. These legal enactments cover a broad gamut of different aspects relating to computer software, protection of computer software, access and control of digital information, privacy, security, internet access and usage, and electronic commerce. These laws have been described as "paper laws" for "paperless environment".
2. AREAS OF LAW IN CYBERLAW

  • There is intellectual property in general, including copyright, rules on fair use, and special rules on copy protection for digital media, and circumvention of such schemes. The area of software patents is controversial, and still evolving in Europe and elsewhere.
  • The related topics of software licenses, end user license agreements, free software licenses and open-source licenses can involve discussion of product liability, professional liability of individual developers, warranties, contract law, trade secrets and intellectual property. As of early 2004, open-source licenses have not been tested in the courts.
In various countries, areas of the computing and communication industries are regulated – often strictly – by government bodies.
  • There are rules on the uses to which computers and computer networks may be put, in particular there are rules on unauthorized access, data privacy and spamming. There are also limits on the use of encryption and of equipment which may be used to defeat copy protection schemes. The export of Hardware and Software between certain states is also controlled.
  • There are laws governing trade on the Internet, taxation, consumer protection, and advertising.
  • There are laws on censorship versus freedom of expression, rules on public access to government information, and individual access to information held on them by private bodies. There are laws on what data must be retained for law enforcement, and what may not be gathered or retained, for privacy reasons.
In certain circumstances and jurisdictions, computer communications may be used in evidence, and to establish contracts. New methods of tapping and surveillance made possible by computers have wildly differing rules on how they may be used by law enforcement bodies and as evidence in court.
Computerized voting technology, from polling machines to internet and mobile-phone voting, raise a host of legal issues.
Some states limit access to the Internet, by law as well as by technical means.

3. ISSUES IN CONCERN
Some observers have asserted that cyberlaw does not exist, since few of the legal issues raised by the Internet are novel and few branches of law are determined by technology. However, others argue that cyberspace should be considered different from real space, as far as legal issues are concerned. Furthermore, since the Internet transcends territorial boundaries, it renders territorially based laws obsolete. They predict that cyberlaw will become a new form of transnational law, ushering in greater standardization of Internet-related legal regulations worldwide to accommodate e-commerce, globalization, and the spread of western, democratic ideals. Some view this as the opportunity for greater freedoms, security, and prosperity to be extended to more people around the globe. Others, however, fear that such a trend will infringe on national sovereignty and legal jurisdictions. Finally, they caution that cyberlaw will benefit the interests of large, multinational businesses and police surveillance, rather than the civil liberties of individual citizens.
As a conclusion, i think that cyber law is still in progress ( i mean in the process of expandition n enforcement of its judiciary! there's still more to do and we will discussed it in the next writing! Arigatohozaimas,thank you
Terima Kasih!!!

Monday, October 11, 2010

Widened You Mind

For your information, quite a number of authors have summarized the difficulties facing by the nation noting that cyberspace has radically undermined the relationship between activity and physical location. Cyberspace has transformed the link connecting geographical location and the power of governments over activities taking place within their borders.


It has transformed :
(i)       the power of governments to control    
          online behaviour


(ii)      the effects that the internet has on 
          individuals or things


(iii)     the legitimacy of local governments 
          to enforce rules respecting the 
          internet


(iv)     the ability of a specific location to 
         give notice of the rules applicable to
         the given activity




reference :  Roy J Girasa. Cyberlaw

~what is exactly cyberspace?~



Where is cyberspace? The answers to this question: it is everywhere and nowhere; it exists in the smallest bursts of matter and energy and is called forth only by the presence of man through the intercession of an Internet provider.

If the answers are useless, it only shows that we are asking the wrong question. We should first ask: what is cyberspace? To this question at least a functional answer is possible. Functionally, cyberspace is a place. It is a place where messages and webpages are posted for everyone in the world to see, if they can find them.

The United States Supreme Court's first opinion about the Internet contains language that makes one hopeful that U.S. courts will accept the legal metaphor of cyberspace as a place outside national boundaries: "Taken together, these tools constitute a unique medium -- known to its users as 'cyberspace'-- located in no particular geographical location but available to anyone, anywhere in the world, with access to the internet." the picture can explain what is cyberspace.


i think the picture will make all of u wondering. that is the clue what i'll be writing next time. wait and see guys

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Everything must be started with the INTRODUCTION.

An astronaut allegedly said that, when viewing earth from outer space, there were no boundaries separating humanity. Jurisdiction itself is based on the concept of boundaries. Laws are based on the territorial sovereignty of a state of central governing authority. However, when we speak about cyberspace, we could define it as an area which there are no boundaries or borders. Nations have been debated and discussed on how to enforce local laws to the activity which are global in nature. Courts from every nations tried to solve the problems using old laws to the new technology but it seems to be less satisfactory. Is there any solution towards this problems? Who should determine the borders of cyberspace?