LEGAL AND ETHICAL ISSUES IN E-COMMERCE

LEGAL AND ETHICAL ISSUES IN E-COMMERCE By Prof. Harman Mangat LESSON PLAN LESSON TIME DISTRIBUTION Major ethical issues 5 min Privacy issues 25...
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LEGAL AND ETHICAL ISSUES IN E-COMMERCE By Prof. Harman Mangat

LESSON PLAN LESSON

TIME DISTRIBUTION

Major ethical issues

5 min

Privacy issues

25 min

Taxation

5 min

M-commerce

10 min

L-commerce

10 min

Gps

5 min

Benefits & Advantages

10 min

REFERENCE PAGES

ASSOCIATED CASES

2

OBJECTIVES To understand ethical and legal issues  To understand the security concerns  To know about L-commerce 

MAJOR LEGAL AND ETHICAL ISSUES IN ELECTRONIC COMMERCE Privacy  Intellectual Property  Free Speech  Taxation  Computer Crimes  Consumer Protection  Miscellaneous 

LEGALITY VS. ETHICS Illegal acts break the law while unethical acts may not be illegal  Ethics  Branch of philosophy that deals with what is considered right or wrong  Right and wrong not always clear  Consider  Company sells profiles of customers with information collected through cookies  Company allows personal use of Web but secretly monitors activity  Company knowingly sells tax software with bugs 

PRIVACY ISSUES Information privacy: claim of individuals, groups, or organizations to determine when and to what extent information about them is disseminated.  Right to privacy is not absolute  Public’s right to know superceded individuals right to privacy 

HOW IS PRIVATE INFORMATION COLLECTED? Reading your newsgroup postings  Finding you in an Internet Directory  Making your browser collect information about you  Recording what your browser says about you  Reading your email  Most common methods are cookies and site registration 

WEB SITE REGISTRATION Must fill in registration to get to site  Sometimes sold to third parties  User survey found (Eighth User Survey, 1998)  40% users falsify information  Nearly 67% (US and Europe) don’t register because of privacy concerns  Nearly 57% say they don’t trust sites collecting information  Only 6% will always register when asked 

COOKIES 

 



Help maintain user status A temporary passport Used for  Customizing sites (Yahoo)  Improve online services (Amazon)  Collect demographics and usage statistics (Double-click) Protection  Delete cookies  Anti-cookie software  PGP’s Cookie Cutter  Luck man's Anonymous Cookie  Cookie Crusher  Cookie Monster

FIVE PRINCIPLES OF PRIVACY PROTECTION 

Notice/Awareness 



Choice/consent 



Must be able to access and challenge information

Integrity/Security 



Consumers to be made aware of options and give consent

Access/participation 



Notice of collection practices prior to collecting information

Must be assured data is secure

Enforcement/Redress 

Government legislation or legal remedies

PRINCIPLES OF SAFE HARBOR Companies must tell consumers how and why personal data is collected and who it's shared with  Consumers must be able to request their data not be shared  Companies must provide notice and choice before data is given to third parties  Consumers must have access to data about them and have the ability to correct mistakes  Companies must take reasonable measures to protect data  Personal data must be relevant to its intended purpose  Procedures must be in place to settle complaints and resolve disputes 

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY  In   

E-Commerce Copyrights Patents Trademarks

COPYRIGHTING Protects expression of idea – not the idea itself  Example , pull-down menus cannot be copyrighted  Confers owner exclusive right to  Copy the work  Distribute to the public  Expires after certain number of years after death of copyright holder  28 years in the US  50 years in UK  Generally, contents of websites are copyrighted 

COPYRIGHTS PROTECTION Digital Watermarks  Embedded invisible bits in the digital content  Cannot prevent copying but helps identify who is doing it  Validation codes  Activation or deactivation of software 

PATENTS Grants holder exclusive rights on inventions for fixed time  17 years in US  20 years in UK  Innovation must be  Novel  Sufficiently inventive step (not trivial)  Capable of industrial application  Amazon sued Barnes and Noble for patent infringement (1-click ordering)  Priceline has patent on reverse-auction model – sued Expedia 

TRADEMARKS Graphical sign used by business to identify their goods and services  Type of IP  Must meet criteria of distinctive, original, and not deceptive  Domain names can be trademarked if they meet above criteria  WWF won first ever ruling against man who filed for worldwrestlingfederation.com 

FREE SPEECH, INTERNET DECENCY, SPAMMING, AND CENSORSHIP Censorship – attempts to control material on the Web  Communications Decency Act (CDA) was passed by Congress but later ruled unconstitutional  Protecting Children  Parental control  Governmental control  ISP accountability  AOL does not allow hate sites  CompuServe was forced by Germany to shut down 200 newsgroups related to sex – CompuServe forced to shut them down worldwide 

SPAMMING  Indiscriminate

distribution of messages without permission of receiver  Some legislation out there 

Unsolicited Commercial Electronic Mail Act  Requires all spam to start with word “advertisement”  Includes name and address of sender

TAXATION Internet Tax Moratorium Act (1998-2001) Prohibits states from taxing the fees that Internet service providers collect for providing Internet service and from collecting Internetspecific taxes on e-commerce transactions  President George W. Bush signed into law a bill from Congress proposing a new two-year moratorium extension (starting Nov. 29, 2001) 

OTHER ISSUES  Consider

on your own

Electronic contracts  Online Gambling  Validity of electronic documents  Time and date on documents across borders  Which country has jurisdiction over E-Commerce transaction  Can web site link to another without permission 



Example Ticketmaster vs. Microsoft

TAXATION ISSUES Controversial  Different jurisdiction  Consumers’ reaction  Legal  Internet Tax Freedom Act  No taxes till 2001  Internet Nondiscrimination Act of 2000  No taxes till 2006 (5 year extension) 

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NEW FRONTIERS IN E-COMMERCE: M-COMMERCE AND L-COMMERCE

MOBILE VIGNETTES Bus riders in San Francisco can find when the next bus is due from their cell phone or Palm VII – Next Bus tracks in real time  Dine One One – uses AT&T Pocket Net service to link driver cell phones to central network.  System locates and notifies driver to get to restaurant  Emails order to restaurant  Food ready to be delivered  DOCOMO I-Mode in Japan offers wireless services that include shopping guides, maps, ticketing, news, gambling, dining and reservations 

WHAT IS M-COMMERCE? 

Also known as pervasive computing  E-commerce done in a wireless environment  Any transaction with a monetary value that is conducted via a mobile telecommunications network.

ATTRIBUTES OF M-COMMERCE Characteristics Mobility

Value-Added Attributes Product and service localization

Product personalization

M-Commerce

Ubiquity Instant connectivity

Reachability

Convenience

OTHER DRIVERS OF E-COMMERCE Widespread availability of devices  No need for PC  Cell phone culture  Vendors push  Declining prices  Improvement in bandwidth  E-commerce growth in general  Digital divide (more cell phones in developing countries) 

GENERATIONS OF MOBILE NETWORKS 







First Generation (1G)  1979-1992  Analog cell communications Second Generation (2G)  Digital Technology in place today  Mostly text 2.5G  Interim technology based on standards (GPRS and EDGE) that can accommodate graphics Third Generation (3G)  Non-IP based interface  Supports rich multimedia  2001 – introduced in Japan  2002 – introduced in Europe  2003 – Verizon introduces 3G in US

3G COMMUNICATIONS Global wireless communication technology that makes possible packet-based transmission of digitized voice, data and video  ITU Guidelines from 2000  2Mbits/s for fixed position  144Kbits/sec in moving vehicles  Allow global roaming  Race for spectrum  1710 to 1855 MHz and 2520 to 2670 MHz  1.7GHz currently used by military for satellite control  Billions of $ plus a decade to change 

WHERE ARE WE TODAY? The first 3G network released in Japan, Oct. 1, 2001.  This new service will allow users to receive data at six to 40 times faster than current speeds, making fast mobile Internet access and video downloads possible. 

HOW ABOUT 3G IN THE US? On January 28, 2002, Verizon Wireless rolled out its 3G “Express Network” along the nation’s east coast, thus making it the first US carrier to offer such services to the public (Computerworld, Jan 29, 2002).  The same day, Cingular Wireless and AT&T Wireless announced a joint-venture project to make wireless web access available along 3000 miles of interstate highways in Arizona, Colorado, Kansas, Minnesota, New Mexico, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Texas and Utah (AT&T Wireless News Release, Jan 28, 2002). 

A QUOTE FROM THE 3G FORUM 

The Promise of 3G technologies is a combination of high-speed wireless access w/ internet protocol(IP) Based services will bring the world to your fingertips. It is a world in which we will be able to check emails, book holidays, organize share portfolios, hold video conferences or download video clips of the latest film, instantly & simply from our mobiles. The capability of mobile networks to pinpoint a mobile user’s location opens opportunities for the creation of new situational information on, and directions to, the nearest restaurant or hotel.”

10 KEY TRENDS IN M-COMMERCE 



 

M-Commerce hype will peak  Over 1 billion phone worldwide capable of Internet access in 2003 Enterprise Applications Will Become the White Hot Center of Mobile eBusiness  Wireless CRM Consumer Use of Mobile Will Revolve Around Information, Not Transactions Embedded Barcode Readers in Phones  Sidesteps problem of data entry

KEY TRENDS Smart Handheld Displays Will Show Some Improvement Mobile Security Will Become a Hot Issue Voice Navigation Will Remain a Work in Progress Convergence Will Continue, but It Will Still Be a Multiple-Device World Advertising Will Continue to Expand to Wireless Devices Carriers Must Shift Their Distribution Strategies



  



 •

Shift from end users to enterprise

L-COMMERCE “location, location, location”  Satellite-based location technology that is capable of finding people on foot or in vehicles  General Motors Corp. in Detroit has installed over 1 million of its OnStar GPS-enabled systems in vehicles  FCC sets 2005 deadline for E911  Location-tracking technology also creates potential Big Brother issues 

GLOBAL POSITIONING SYSTEM GPS-enabled devices allow exact identification of location  Supported by 24 US government satellites  Orbits earth every 12 hours  10,900 miles altitude  Satellite transmits position and time signal from onboard atomic clock  Receivers have synchronized clock  Using speed of signals (~186,000 mps), possible to pinpoint location to within 50 feet.  See www.trimble.com/gps for a tutorial 

OBSTACLES TO M-COMMERCE AND L-COMMERCE Usability issues  Effectiveness, efficiency, satisfaction  Lack of standardized security protocol  Insufficient bandwidth  3G licenses  Transmission limitations  GPS does not work in cities with skyscrapers  Power consumption  Wireless and Health hazards 

REVIEW QUESTIONS What key terms have been explained in the lecture?  What do you understand by l-commerce  What is the future of L-commerce?  Explain the major drivers behind e-commerce  Differnce between legal and ethical issues  What are the other legal and ethical issues in ecommerce?  What is the recent development in taxation issue. 

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