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EU - Legal and Market Aspects of Electronic Signatures
Report of the European Commission project on legal and market aspects of electronic signatures. This study is performed by the K.U.Leuven (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven). Project manager Jos Dumortier, Professor at the Faculty of Law and Director of the Interdisciplinary Centre for Law and Information Technology (ICRI). For the legal aspects he worked together with his research fellow Patrick Van Eecke and with Georgia Skouma of the IT Law Unit of the law firm Landwell (Bogaert & Vandemeulebroeke, Brussels). For market and technical issues Professor Dumortier was assisted by Hans Nilsson and Stefan Kelm. They are well-known technical experts in electronic signatures and related standardisation and implementation issues.
http://www.qlinks.net/items/qlitem17047.htm


Report on the CyberCrime Convention

Cyber-Rights & Cyber-Liberties releases report on the CyberCrime Convention 2001

Leeds, 01 December, 2003 - Cyber-Rights & Cyber-Liberties, released today an Advocacy Handbook for the Non Governmental Organisations: The Council of Europe's Cyber-Crime Convention 2001 and the additional protocol on the criminalisation of acts of a racist or xenophobic nature committed through computer systems, December 2003.

The Cyber-Crime Convention 2001 and its additional protocol has been developed by the Council of Europe, an international and well respected organisation with a primary mission to strengthen democracy, human rights, and the rule of law throughout its member states. Although the Cyber-Crime Convention states in the preamble that a proper balance needs to be ensured between the interests of law enforcement and respect for fundamental human rights, the balance resolutely and regrettably favours the former claimes Cyber-Rights & Cyber-Liberties.

While the CoE's concerns in relation to cyber-crimes and its desire to address criminal law and mutual assistance in criminal matters are shared by many, any co-ordinated policy initiative at an international level should ideally aim to offer the best protection for individual rights and liberties. Lamentably, this has not been the case.

This advocacy handbook for the NGOs written by Dr. Yaman Akdeniz, the director of Cyber-Rights & Cyber-Liberties provides a policy analysis of the Cyber-Crime Convention 2001 and its first additional protocol from a human rights perspective for policy specialists, NGOs, and human rights activists within the 45 member states of the Council of Europe. Compatibility problems with the European Convention on Human Rights and implications for freedom of expression, privacy of communications and data protection will be the main focus of this critical analysis. The appendices include other useful information that could be relied upon while NGOs and policy activists lobby their individual governments in relation to the implementation of the Cyber-Crime.

The Report is released as a pdf file and can be obtained through
 http://www.cyber-rights.org/cybercrime/

For further information contact: Dr. Yaman Akdeniz
Director, Cyber-Rights & Cyber-Liberties
email: lawya@cyber-rights.org
Tel: +44 (0)7798 865116 Fax: +44 (0)7092199011
http://www.cyber-rights.org / http://www.cyber-rights.net


FR - LIABILITY FOR HYPERLINKS
The Forum on the Internet Rights released a new recommendation relating to liability for hyperlinks. This report completes the prior recommendation (issued by the Forum in March 2003) and provides practical guidance to any person creating hyperlinks, whether manually (by a website editor) or automatically (by search engines), as well as for victims of unfair linking.


Regulation and Internet Use in Developing Countries

Policymakers are simultaneously concerned about the consequences of a worsening "digital divide" between rich and poor countries and hopeful that information and computing technologies could increase economic growth in developing countries. But very little research has explored the reasons for the digital divide beyond noting that it is strongly correlated with standard development indicators, and no empirical research has explored the role of regulation.

Wallsten uses data from a unique new survey of telecommunications regulators and other sources to measure the effects of regulation in Internet development. He finds regulation strongly correlated with lower Internet penetration and higher Internet access charges. More specifically, controlling for factors such as income, development of the telecommunications infrastructure, ubiquity of personal computers, and time trends, countries that require formal regulatory approval for Internet service providers (ISPs) to begin operations have fewer Internet users and Internet hosts than countries that do not require such approval. Moreover, countries that regulate ISP final-user prices have higher Internet access prices than countries that do not have such regulations. These results suggest that developing countries' own regulatory policies can have large impacts on the digital divide.

This paper-a product of Investment Climate, Development Research Group-is part of a larger effort in the group to understand regulatory and infrastructure sector reforms.


Publication of second annual report on cyberspace : "The Internet under Surveillance - Obstacles to the free flow of information online"
The Internet is the bane of all dictatorial regimes, but even in democracies, new anti-terrorism laws have tightened government control of it and undermined the principle of protecting journalistic sources. This report is about attitudes to the Internet by the powerful in 60 countries, between spring 2001 and spring 2003. The preface is by Vinton G. Cerf, who is often called the "father" of the Internet.


Google Censorship - How It Works
This report describes the system by which results in the Google search engine are suppressed. Google is arguably the world's most popular search engine. However, contrary perhaps to a naive impression, in some cases the results of a search are affected by various government-related factors. That is, search results which may otherwise be shown, are deliberately excluded. The suppression may be local to a country, or global to all Google results.


Internet use in CEECs catching up with Western Europe
(EU Business: 19/02/2003)
Internet use in Central and Eastern European countries (CEECs) is catching up with that of Western Europe, according to a new study by market analysts IDC.
The percentage of the population using the Internet at least once a month in the region is expected to reach 17 per cent in 2003 and 27 per cent in 2006. The growth is driven predominantly by use in the workplace and schools.


Wide Band
The European Union must accelerate the changeover to broadband services and third generation mobile communications. The report identifies broadband and "3G" as the main drivers of the sector. The economic and social benefits they bring make it more urgent than ever that the availability and use of these technologies be improved.

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