PRAWO w IT
Amerykańskie prawo informatyczne (IT law, computer law, Internet law, cyberlaw, e-law) to wszelkie akty prawa stanowionego, zarówno na poziomie federalnym jak i stanowym oraz umowy miedzynarodowe, których stroną są Stany Zjednoczone a także prawo stanowione przez sądy i organy administracji publicznej, dotyczące szeroko pojętych zagadnień informatycznych.
Przedmiotowe zagadnienia amerykańskiego prawa informatycznego obejmują m.in.:
Jurisdiction
Specific jurisdiction
General jurisdiction
Criminal analogy
Enforcement
Contracts
Browserwrap licenses
Shrinkwrap and clikwrap licenses
Terms of Service
Software licenses
FLOSS licenses
Contractual and statutory liability for defective software
Auction sites and contracts
Trespass to chattels
Trespass involving spam
Trespass to online databases
Intellectual Property
Copyright
Protection of computer software
Reverse enginnering
Different copyright infringement issues (civil actions)
Derivative Works issues (framing, deep links)
Technological protection measures
Trademarks (domain names and unfair competition, search engines and trademarks, keywords)
Domain names as trademarks
Cybersquatting/typosquatting
Free speech and fair use of trademarks in domain names
Databases
Patents (software patents and business models patents)
Trade secrets
Regulating Content and Communication
Pornography
Defamation and information torts
Spam
Liability of internet service providers
Privacy
Cookies, adware
Spyware
Other issues
Posting different types of information
Data retention and interception (administrative, civil and criminal aspects)
Computer and Internet crimes
Hacking (system breach and/or data manipulation, etc.)
Dos, DDoS, botnets
Viruses, worms, trojans, timebombs
IP crimes
Digital espionage, carding, e-banking robbery, online wars
Pornography
E-government
E-administration
E-voting
Net-neutrality
Technological neutrality of the state - open standards
Litigation
E-evidences
Inne zagadnienia