Week 8: Law & Internet Seminar (LAW 745)
Computer crime, money laundering, computer torts (libel, fraud)
Reading:
-
Review the Denning & Baugh paper from week 3 and look at their Statement
Before the Senate Committee on the Judiciary Subcommittee on Technology,
Terrorism, and Government Information
-
Mark D. Rasch, Computer
Security: Legal Lessons in the Information Age
-
Money Laundering remains one of the biggest worries if you listen to regulators.
Consider FINCEN's paper, Money
in a Borderless World .
-
Cyber-libel raises some of the hardest questions since the libel may never
be deleted and there's no reason to think corrections will ever catch up
with the falsehood. (There are also jurisdictional issues....).
Consider the Matt Drudge case; you can find many articles about it on the
Internet...here's one
to get you started.
-
Poke around the Online Fraud
Information Menu and the Internet
Scams Are there specific cyber-frauds? Or same old frauds in
a new medium? Does the FTC
complaint against Audiotex describe a uniquely Internet fraud?
How about Peter Wayner, Bogus
Web Sites Troll for Credit Card Numbers?
-
"Identity Theft" is one crime that, even though it can happen without computers,
seems particularly easy with the Internet. Consider Nina Bernstein,
Lives
on File: Privacy Devalued in Information Economy.
-
Can terrorists use the Internet to unleash cyber-war on the USA?
Or vice-versa?. You can skim Martin Libicki, What
is Information Warfare? for a survey. Is the Pentagon
vulnerable?
-
Don't miss the DigiCrime web site.
Doing:
-
Catch up on all the "doing" assignments
you have missed.
Optional
Seminar
homepage.
Last week's
assignment.
Next
week's
assignment.
Version 1.03b. Last modified: Oct. 9, 1997