2nd Edition

Law of Electronic Commercial Transactions Contemporary Issues in the EU, US and China

By Faye Fangfei Wang Copyright 2014
376 Pages
by Routledge

376 Pages
by Routledge

376 Pages
by Routledge

The development of new technologies places new challenges to the interpretation and implementation of legislation in the information society. The recent deployment of service-oriented computing and cloud computing for online commercial activities has urged countries to amend existing legislation and launch new regulations. With the exponential growth of international electronic commercial... Read more
Part 1: Introduction  1. Introduction Part 2: Electronic Contracts: The Scenario of Electronic Contracting  2. What is an Electronic Contract?  3. When is an Electronic Contract Made?  4. Where is the Contract Made?  5. What are the Vitiating Factors? 6. Where is the Contract Made?  7. Contemporary Issue: Electronic Battle of Forms Part 3: Online Security  8. Electronic Signatures and Electronic Authentication  9. Data Privacy Protection: Regulations  10. Data Privacy Protection: Practices and Implementation  11. Liability of Internet Service Providers : Implementation of the Notice and Takedown Procedure Part 4: Dispute Resolutions  12. Resolving Electronic Commercial Disputes  Part 5: The Future 13. Conclusions and Recommendations

Biography

Faye Fangfei Wang is a senior lecturer in Law at Brunel Law School, Brunel University (London), UK. She holds a PhD from the University of Southampton, a LLM from the University of Aberdeen, and a LLB and diploma in computer science and application from Guangdong University of Foreign Studies, China. She is the convenor of the Cyberlaw Section at the Society of Legal Scholars in the UK. She specialises in cyberlaw most particularly from the private law perspective, covering the topics of contract law, commercial law, private international law, online dispute resolution, privacy and data protection and digital IP Rights. She is also the author of the monograph: Internet Jurisdiction and Choice of Law, Cambridge University Press, 2010.