E-commerce Law: National and Transnational Topics and Perspectives

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Kluwer Law International B.V., 2003 M01 1 - 144 pages
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To the contention that the advent of electronic commerce demands a near-complete jettisoning of existing laws affecting business transactions, the authors of the penetrating essays in this book answer: not so. Rather, the resolution to the challenge lies in the combination of existing legal elements from heretofore disparate disciplines, and the creation from these elements of a new field of legal principle and practice, a field that will nonetheless overlap with classical commercial law. Perhaps the most significant feature of this emerging body of law is that it is necessarily transnational, as e-commerce cannot be contained within national borders.

Although there is a general consensus that 'what holds off line, holds on line,' there are circumstances that give rise to legal issues peculiar to the information technology environment. These essays deal with some of these issues and other relevant matters, including the following:

the country-of-origin principle in EU law; variations in national implementations of the European Directive on electronic signatures; civil liability of Internet service providers; negligence, damage, defective products, culpable wrongdoing, and other tort issues in an on line context; defining the moment of effectiveness of an e-mail notice; 'good faith and fair dealing' on line; the Internet as a zone of 'socially responsible spontaneity'; protection of databases: how much is too much? international private law issues in business-to-consumer disputes; and redefining the separate realms of litigation, legal advice, and rule-making as e-commerce grows in the years to come.

This book elaborates and updates a staff exchange that took place in 2001 among legal scholars from the Universities of Oxford and Leiden. Its sometimes astonishing, sometimes unsettling insights represent today's clearest, best-informed thinking on the legal aspects of this all-pervasive feature of contemporary society.

E-commerce is published in cooperation with the E.M. Meijers Institute of Legal Studies of Leiden University Faculty of Law.

 

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Contents

Primary EC law
10
Conclusion
25
Internal market principles
38
Legal effects of electronic signatures
39
Liability of CSP
42
Crossborder recognition of qualified certificates
44
Data protection
45
Closing remarks
48
To the European drawing board
57
An English introduction to online torts
59
Torts in situations akin to contract
60
Defective eproducts
63
Torts involving culpable encouragement of wrongdoing by others and culpable failure to control others
67
Damaging an ebusiness
74
Provisional conclusions
77
The moment of effectiveness of email notices
79

Civil liability of Internet providers following the Directive on Electronic Commerce
49
Prohibitory injunction
51
Dissimilar exemptions
52
Caching and the act of reproduction protected by copyright law and related rights
53
Liability and prohibitory injunction
54
Compensation claims or declarative judgement
55
The country of origin principle
56
Corrections of and exceptions to the receipt rule
83
Caveat emptor in digital times
89
Conclusion
102
Conclusion
116
List of contributors and editors
139
Copyright

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