FC: Michael Geist on "The Internet law theory of everything"

From: Declan McCullagh (declanat_private)
Date: Mon Jun 09 2003 - 11:16:01 PDT

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    Date: Mon, 9 Jun 2003 08:30:56 -0400
    To: declanat_private
    From: Michael Geist <mgeistat_private>
    Subject: The Internet Law Theory of Everything
    
    Declan,
    
    Your readers may be interested in my latest column which I dub "The 
    Internet Law Theory of Everything."  It picks up on a recent Thomas 
    Friedman NY Times column titled the Theory of Everything which sought to 
    explain growing resentment toward the U.S.   It argues that many of 
    Friedman's observations may apply in an Internet law context as well.  It 
    points to Internet governance, domain name disputes, copyright, privacy 
    law, and free speech, to suggest that much of the world is grappling with 
    Internet policies that are established in one jurisdiction but applied 
    worldwide, leaving many frustrated with their lack of influence over their 
    own national policies.  The original Friedman column is at
    http://www.nytimes.com/2003/06/01/opinion/01FRIE.html
    
    This new column is at
    <http://shorl.com/jegijotejivo> [Toronto Star]
    
    
    U.S. extends its hegemony over the Net
    
    Michael Geist
    Law Bytes
    
    New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman last week wrote an intriguing 
    column titled "The Theory of Everything," in which he sought to explain the 
    escalating global resentment toward the United States. Friedman suggested 
    that throughout the 1990s the U.S. became exponentially more powerful 
    economically, militarily, and technologically than the rest of the world.
    
    As a result, U.S. global power over economics and culture has become so 
    great that it deeply affects the lives of citizens worldwide - even more so 
    than the policies of their own national governments.
    
    Friedman concluded that the world is gradually awakening to its lack of 
    influence over the power and policies that shape its citizens' lives, 
    thereby leading to the divide between a single have and the rest of the 
    world's have nots.
    
    A similar theory may well apply to many of the policy conflicts surrounding 
    Internet law issues. In recent years, the world has begun to grapple with 
    Internet policies that are established in one jurisdiction (typically, 
    though not solely, the U.S.), but applied worldwide. That policy imbalance 
    has left many countries resentful of foreign dominance of the Internet.
    
    Internet governance and the domain name system effectively illustrate this 
    phenomenon. Recent battles over who governs the Internet's domain name 
    system - the root server that ensures email travels to its intended 
    destination and that Web sites remain accessible to a global Internet 
    audience - often boil down to the U.S. on one side and the rest of the 
    world on the other since the root server resides in Virginia and the U.S. 
    government has left little doubt that it will not surrender control over it 
    to the global community anytime soon.
    
    Other countries therefore face a dilemma. While most acknowledge that the 
    U.S. has done an admirable job of maintaining the stability of the domain 
    name system, many also lament that the U.S. enjoys greater control over the 
    Internet than does their national government, even within their own country.
    
    A similar set of concerns has arisen within the context of domain name 
    disputes. The U.S. Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act, enacted in 
    1999 to deal with cases of domain name cybersquatting, contains a provision 
    that allows trademark holders to sue domain name registrants in U.S. courts 
    regardless of where the domain name was registered.
    
    That provision recently led one U.S. court to order the cancellation of a 
    domain name owned by a Korean registrant despite the existence of a Korean 
    court order prohibiting the cancellation. The U.S. court simply ruled that 
    its decision trumped that of the Korean court, suggesting that U.S. law may 
    enjoy greater control over domain name disputes in foreign countries than 
    does local law.
    
    Beyond domain names, copyright law has also led to policy clashes between 
    countries. The U.S. Digital Millennium Copyright Act, which contains a 
    "notice and takedown" system that shelters Internet service providers from 
    liability for copyright infringement provided they promptly take down 
    allegedly infringing content once notified of its existence on their 
    systems, has been widely criticized for its broad reach.
    
    ISPs in Canada and Australia have both reported that they regularly receive 
    notice and takedown notifications from U.S. companies despite the fact that 
    the U.S. law does not apply in those countries. ISPs ignore the requests at 
    their own legal peril, since some are left with the sense that U.S. 
    copyright law is fast becoming the global standard.
    
    Despite the fact that countries such as Canada have enacted their own 
    privacy legislation, privacy is yet another area where the influence of the 
    U.S. and the European Union is felt locally. The U.S. Children's Online 
    Privacy Protection Act, which applies to the collection of personal 
    information from children under the age of 13, sits alongside Canadian 
    privacy law since it provides that any Web site that targets U.S. children 
    is subject to the law, regardless of the site's location.
    
    The European Union has been similarly aggressive on privacy matters, 
    enacting regulations that prohibit the transfer of personal data to any 
    country that does not meet its standard for privacy protection. While 
    Canada's statute obtained a favourable ruling in 2002, the E.U. has not 
    hesitated to express reservations about the legal frameworks of many other 
    countries.
    
    Even the U.S. is not immune to policy influence from outside its borders. 
    Free speech on the Internet, which typically enjoys greater protection in 
    the U.S. than in most other jurisdictions, is viewed by some in the U.S. as 
    coming under attack by foreign courts and regulators. For example, courts 
    in France and Australia have asserted jurisdiction over U.S. publishers 
    such as Yahoo! and Dow Jones, which both claimed that the speech in 
    question would have been protected under U.S. law.
    
    In the wake of these Internet policy conflicts, countries are left with 
    three alternatives:
    First, they may accept the status quo, resigned to a world in which 
    national policy plays second fiddle to foreign policies that may not be in 
    the national interest.
    Second, they may follow the examples set by China and Saudi Arabia by 
    diminishing the conflicts through the use of filters to block out 
    controversial issues and Web sites, creating, in effect, an "Internet-lite" 
    for their citizens.
    Third, they may seek to navigate through the policy conflicts by adopting 
    an approach that respects the sovereign choices of other countries and 
    tries to limit differences through global consensus mechanisms.
    Although the third alternative is clearly the most challenging, it may also 
    represent the best hope for an Internet that embraces different cultural 
    and social choices, rather than forcing a single, often unpopular, solution 
    on an unsuspecting world.
    
    Michael Geist is the Canada Research Chair in Internet and E-commerce Law 
    at the University of Ottawa and technology counsel with the law firm Osler 
    Hoskin & Harcourt LLP. He is on-line at http://www.lawbytes.ca and 
    http://www.osler.com (mgeistat_private).
    -- 
    **********************************************************************
    Professor Michael A. Geist
    Canada Research Chair in Internet and E-commerce Law
    University of Ottawa Law School, Common Law Section
    Technology Counsel, Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP
    57 Louis Pasteur St., P.O. Box 450, Stn. A, Ottawa, Ontario, K1N 6N5
    Tel: 613-562-5800, x3319     Fax: 613-562-5124
    mgeistat_private              http://www.lawbytes.ca
    
    BNA's Internet Law News - http://www.bna.com/ilaw
    Toronto Star Law Bytes columns at http://shorl.com/derakoprutapu
    Internet Law Text - http://www.captus.com/Information/inetlaw-flyer.htm
    Canadian Privacy Law at: http://www.privacyinfo.ca
    ICANN UDRP Info at http://www.udrpinfo.com
    ccTLD Governance Project at http://www.cctldinfo.com
    
    
    
    
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