Jurisdiction and the Internet : a study of regulatory competence over online activity

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Bibliographic Information

Jurisdiction and the Internet : a study of regulatory competence over online activity

Uta Kohl

Cambridge University Press, 2007

Available at  / 6 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references, bibliography (p. 291-311), and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Which state has and should have the right and power to regulate sites and online events? Who can apply their defamation or contract law, obscenity standards, gambling or banking regulation, pharmaceutical licensing requirements or hate speech prohibitions to any particular Internet activity? Traditionally, transnational activity has been 'shared out' between national sovereigns with the aid of location-centric rules which can be adjusted to the transnational Internet. But can these allocation rules be stretched indefinitely, and what are the costs for online actors and for states themselves of squeezing global online activity into nation-state law? Does the future of online regulation lie in global legal harmonisation or is it a cyberspace that increasingly mirrors the national borders of the offline world? This book offers some uncomfortable insights into one of the most important debates on Internet governance.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Jurisdiction and the Internet
  • 2. Law - too lethargic for the online era?
  • 3. The tipping point in law
  • 4. Many destinations but no map
  • 5. The solution: only the country of origin?
  • 6. The lack of enforcement power - a curse or a blessing?
  • 7. A 'simple' choice: more global law or a less global Internet.

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