Title: Cyberspace Governance
1Cyberspace Governance
- Erich Schweighofer
- Universität Wien
- Arbeitsgruppe Rechtsinformatik
- Institut für Völkerrecht und Internationale
Beziehungen - On leave, at present working for the European
Commission in Brussels. The expressed views are
those of the author.
2Outline
- Concept of cyberspace governance
- No cyberspace regulation insufficient regulatory
intervention, regulatory dissens and sometimes
also chaos in some areas (e.g. spam, taxes,
pornography, games, data protection) - Cyberspace governance providers
- Typology States, Public and Private
International Organisations, Transnational
Corporations, Citizens - Methods and efficiency of regulation
- Conclusions
3Definition of Governance
- UN Commission on Global Governance, Our Global
Neighbourhood - The Report of the Commission on Global Governance
(1995) chapter 1 - Governance is the sum of the many ways
individuals and institutions, public and private,
manage their common affairs. It is a continuing
process through which conflicting or diverse
interests may be accommodated and co-operative
action may be taken. It includes formal
institutions and regimes empowered to enforce
compliance, as well as informal arrangements that
people and institutions either have agreed to or
perceive to be in their interest. - Aim rule of law as a efficient way of risk
reduction by providing legal security
4Definitions of Cyberspace (1)
- Gibson
- Cyberspace is a metaphor that allows us to grasp
this place where since about the time of the
second world war we've increasingly done so many
of the things that we think of as civilization.
Cyberspace is where we do our banking, it's
actually where the bank keeps your money these
days because it's all direct electronic transfer.
It's where the stock market actually takes place,
it doesn't occur so much any more on the floor of
the exchange but in the electronic communication
between the worlds stock-exchanges. So I think
that since so much of what we do is happening
digitally and electronically, it's useful to have
an expression that allows that all to be part of
the territory. I think it makes it easier for us
to visualize what we're doing with this stuff. - Metaphor for a new space in which through
communication and data transfer certain actions
are set
5Definitions of Cyberspace (2)
- US Supreme Court, United States et al v American
Civil Liberties Union et al (1997) - a unique and wholly new medium of worldwide
communication. Taken together, these tools
email, mailing list servers, newsgroups, chat
rooms, World Wide Web constitute a unique new
medium - known to its users as "cyberspace" -
located in no particular geographical location
but available to anyone, anywhere in the world,
with access to the Internet. - New space with special regulation problems, in
particular dislocation
6Definitions of Cyberspace (3)
- Council of Europe, Cybercrime Convention (2001)
- By connecting to communication and
information services users create a kind of
COMMON SPACE, called "cyber-space", which is used
for legitimate purposes but may also be the
subject of misuse . - Grewlich (1999)
- invisible, intangible world of electronic
information and processes stored at multiple
interconnected sites, with controlled access and
manifold possibilities for interaction - Quite useful start for a definition
7Definitions of Cyberspace (4)
- Next try (my own)
- Particularities
- New space for human activities, e.g.
communications, leisure (games, pornography),
trading (e-commerce), participation
(e-democracy), administration (e-government),
working (?) - Invisible, intangible, non-territorial (but IPv6
geographic-based unicast addresses), worldwide - Distance does not matter
- Strong interaction with real world (people still
live in real space are always subject to
enforcement of state of residence)
8Definitions of Cyberspace (5)
- Territorial approach not sufficient any more
- No new territory (e.g. declaration of Barlow,
cyberspace jurisdiction à la Johnson/Post) - Too strong interaction with real world
- Persons may be very often in this space for some
time, but they still live in a real physical
world. - They are not away (concept conflict of laws) and
have no relation any more with a particular
country!
9Definitions of Cyberspace (6)
- Regulation providers
- No single regulator so far, but many regulators
- Multilevel regulation (Engel)
- Sometimes a chaos resulting from various
regulation endeavours (e.g. (child) pornography,
data protection, lotteries, spam etc.) - New regulation methods
- New challenge for risk reduction (e.g. providing
legal security) as main aim of legal systems
10Cyberspace regulation (1)
- Options of regulation
- Cyberspace jurisdiction? (Johnson/Post)
- No acceptance
- Territorial jurisdiction?
- Westphalian system realist approach
- Problem of limited reach of the authorities of
the state - Personal jurisdiction?
- Liberal system (Slaughter) citizens have
sovereignty can give it to various organisations
like state, NGO, or transnational corporations - Option for states, sometimes used but in general
limited because of interference with territorial
jurisdiction - New personal communities with self-regulation
(e.g. IETF, W3C, ICANN, information cities ACM
Feb04 etc.)
11Cyberspace regulation (2)
- Developing, but quite limited, focused on
technical issues (IETF), ICANN in this respect
quite unsuccessful - Requires some support by territorial state
- Technical regulation? (software code)
- Fascination option with quite high efficiency
- Lack of regulatory control
- Requires some support (and correction) by
territorial state - Extraterritorial (unilateral) regulation of the
territorial state (or supranational organisation) - Best option for uniform application of laws so
far (e.g. USA, EU) - International law
- Public international law
- Limited use so far
12Cyberspace regulation (3)
- Conflict of laws (private international law,
international penal law, international
administrative law) - In the very end in case of lack of good rules
dispute settlement provider - Tentative solution for unsolved balancing of
realist vs. liberal approach of regulation - Present status multilevel governance of
cyberspace by various regulation agents - States in (close) co-operation with International
Organisations, NGOs, transnational corporations,
citizens etc. - Problems chaos (e.g. no efficient regulation),
dissens, extraterritorial regulation,
self-regulation with lack of accountability
13Cyberspace governance providers (1)
- Idea of regulation agents (Regulierungsagenten)
Kirchner, Lutterbeck - End of strict hierarchies (governance by
government) - Competition of different regulation systems
(governance with government) - Cyberspace governance providers
- Competition of different regulation providers on
activities in cyberspace - Transnational order (Jessups) with new forms of
regulation - Legal systems, regimes, networks, self-regulation
- Exit option of citizens, companies and
communities - Governance by recognition, limited enforcement by
territorial state and cyberspace - Johnson/Crawford/Palfrey Jr. (2004) The Peer
Production of Governance
14Cyberspace governance providers (2)
- States
- Territorial and personal regulation
- Stronger role for self-regulation
- Regulative restraint (Grewlich 1999)
- Forever?
- Extraterritorial (unilateral) regulation
- e.g. USA, EU
- Principles of jurisdiction in public
international law - Territoriality/non-intervention
- Activity, effect, seat of business, place of
residence, birth - Personality
- Extraterritorial jurisdiction
- Effect
15Cyberspace governance providers (3)
- New principle of targeting
- Definition?, e.g. EU Regulation 44/2001 on
jurisdiction, recognition and enforcement of
judgements in civil and commercial matters - Broad principles, fine-tuned rules in national
legal orders (international private,
administrative and penal law) extraordinary
strong role for these often neglected areas of
law - Conflict of laws
- Applicable law
- Public law national law
- Private law Rome Convention on the law
applicable to contractual obligations, UN
Convention on the Sale of Goods, national law
16Cyberspace governance providers (4)
- parties are free to choose
- No clause State to which the contract has the
closest connection - Presumption State of the party performing the
characteristic obligation) - Consumer contracts law of the consumer must be
applied if either - Conclusion of contract because of a specific
invitation to the consumer or by advertising in
the consumers member State - Seller received the consumers order in the
consumers member State - WWW-indicators used language, ZIP-Codes,
contract details - Jurisdiction
- Public law national law
- Private law Brussels and Lugano Conventions on
Jurisdiction and Enforcement of Judgements in
Civil and Commercial Matters since 1 March 2002
replaced by Council Regulation 44/2001
17Cyberspace governance providers (5)
- B2B
- Jurisdiction chosen by parties
- in absence of agreement courts of the
defendants domicile - B2C
- consumer can sue in the State where the business
is established or in the State of his own
domicile - Merchant can only sue in the consumers home
State - Definition of consumer contract
- Contracts with a consumer for
- a repayable in instalments or
- the sale of goods on instalment credit terms or
- contracts where a specific invitation or
advertising was made in the consumers state of
domicile and the consumer took the steps to
conclude the contract in his State of domicile
18Cyberspace governance providers (6)
- International Governmental Organisation (IGO)
community of states and International
Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO) community of
citizens (economic or non-economic - International co-operation of states but also
NGOs, transnational corporations (e.g. in ITU)
and citizens (e.g. ICANN) - Legal basis international treaty or private
contract - Co-operation OCED, Council of Europe, UNO and
special agencies, ITU, UNCITRAL
19Cyberspace governance providers (7)
- Regulation ITU, WIPO, WTO, OCED, Council of
Europe, Hague Conference on Private International
Law, UNCITRAL, IETF, ICANN - Supranational regulation EU/EEA
(telecommunications, internet, data protection,
intellectual property law, e-commerce law etc) - Dispute settlement ICANN domain names, credit
card charge-backs, on-line dispute settlement - Enforcement ICANN domain names, credit card
charge-backs
20Cyberspace governance providers (8)
- Transnational Corporations (TNCs) (Multis)
- Enormous economic power and strong exit option
- Sovereignty at bay (old idea discussed in 1972
et seq.) - Market community of company with its customers
- Rule making (contract or unilateral obligation
data protection code of DaimlerChrysler),
dispute settlement (free choice), weak rule
enforcement - Credit card charge-backs
- Citizens
- Own role participation in decision making,
dispute settlement - (Very often) mediated by NGOs or transnational
corporations (accumulated buying power) - Victim (but also beneficiary) of weak rule
enforcement
21Conclusions
- Cyberspace is an enormous challenge for
governance - Solution of territory for dissens does not fit
very well in cyberspace - Cyberspace jurisdiction will never be (?)
- Multilevel governance
- Various cyberspace regulation providers
- States, international organisations,
transnational corporations, citizens - State remains most important regulator