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Jurisdiction and the Internet Regulatory Competence over Online Activity

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Jurisdiction and the Internet Regulatory Competence over Online Activity
By
Uta Kohl
Description
Which state has
and should have the right and power to regulate which site and online
event? 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
and these 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 harmonization 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.
• Wide
application in civil and criminal law illustrated by reference to
particular substantive areas of law • Uses simple language and
colourful analogies to explain difficult concepts and ideas to
students and non-experts within the field of competence law or
Internet regulation • Each chapter is self-contained; the book
need not be read from cover to cover to be useful
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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