Overview

The course focuses on legal and regulatory aspects of digital data, software, the Internet and related technologies. It covers topics of concern to individuals as well as business and government, including protection of privacy and intellectual property in a digital environment, electronic contracts, computer and information security, cybercrime, and the … For more content click the Read More button below. The interaction between traditional law and information technology plays a central role in the course. To analyse the impact and application of traditional legal principles in a new technological environment, the principles must be translated into the language of the technologies involved. The translation must preserve the original meaning and policy rationale, while exploring its application to both novel and familiar scenarios arising from the ubiquity of digital technologies. It is the aim of the course to teach, encourage and nurture such thinking. Examples of problems we shall encounter and analyze in the course include the connection between enabling technologies of cyber crime and the contours of liability of cyber criminals and their enablers; how the principles of personal information privacy can be adapted to a virtualised global setting; how emerging technologies can disrupt existing legal forms such as contracts or ‘anonymous’ data; and determining the appropriate models of liability and responsibility applicable to platforms based on eg, social media or AI. A statement by Professor Lawrence Lessig captures the essence of the course: “[w]hen dealing with cyberspace, judges are to be translators; different technologies are the different languages; and the aim is to find a reading of [legal principles] that preserves [their] meaning from one world’s technology to another. This is fidelity as translation.” Lawyers who fail to understand the translation will likely pursue sub-optimal litigation strategies, fail to identify emerging conflicts of interests, face unsatisfactory enforcement prospects, and may overlook effective and potentially powerful defences. Topics Introduction to Internet, software, digital data and related technologiesTranslationContracts, ‘disruption’ and protection of parties in a digital environmentData and cyber security in virtualised industriesCybercrime: law, enabling technologies and remediesData surveillance and regulation of global data practicesExamples of regulatory challenges of novel technologies, including AIData sovereignty and extraterritoriality

Conditions for Enrolment

Prerequisite: Completion of 78 UOC in LAWS courses.

Course Attributes

Offered irregularly or alternate years

Delivery

Fully online - Standard (usually weekly or fortnightly)
In-person - Standard (usually weekly or fortnightly)

Pre-2019 Handbook Editions

Access past handbook editions (2018 and prior)