Saturday 23 October 2021

Top 10 Best Cyber Law Books

Cyber Law Book 1

The first of three texts is on the area of cyberlaw and the legal environment of business. The book has been written to address the legal issues surrounding the Internet and electronic commerce in light of new technological realities that confront business managers. The text aims to prepare students to manage intellectual property and is intended for legal environment of business courses that some faculties run. It may also be appropriate for other law courses, sucha as: computers, law and society; Internet law; intellectual property law; and issues in e-commerce.

 


Cyber Law Book 2

Girasa (law and legal studies, Pace U.) stresses the evolving nature of cyberspace law in his overview text, which presents cases that serve as the best explanation of the law as it currently applies to the Internet. Intended for undergraduate or graduate students in business and other disciplines, the text covers topics including jurisdiction; contracts, torts, and criminal activity; copyright, cybersquatting, and other intellectual property issues; privacy and security; and antitrust, securities regulation, and taxation. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

 


Cyber Law Book 3

Presenting an emerging area of law, this book explores the legal doctrines and principles that apply to the operation and development of computer technology and the Internet. It discusses the rapid legislative and judicial responses, demanded by the creation of the new technology, to resolve legal problems of the emerging technology, covering: jurisdiction, constitutional issues, e-business, property rights, and cybercrime. For individuals interested in an introduction to constitutional and business law, as well as intellectual property.

 


Cyber Law Book 4

As the various types of global e-business grow rapidly, the need to establish adequate cyberlaws is increased. The reformation of domestic and global laws has been underway; however, the nature of e-business is one of the constant technological developments, consistently outdating existing laws. Cyberlaw for Global E-Business: Finance, Payments & Dispute Resolution examines cyberlaw discussions worldwide on topics such as cybercrime and risk management, comparative electronic trading systems of securities, digital currency regulation, jurisdiction, and consumer protection in cross-border markets, and case law on international bank transfers. An invaluable resource for policy-makers, business experts, lawyers, scholars, and researchers, this book provides comprehensive research from a global perspective on the legal, technical, and financial implications of e-business

 


Cyber Law Book 5

Authored by Shahid Jamal Tubrazy. Manual of Cyber Laws, Practice and Procedure in Pakistan is an anthology of four major electronic laws of the land in Pakistan, Electronic Transaction Ordinance 2002, Payment Systems Electronic Funds Transfer Act 2007, Prevention of Electronic Crime Ordinance 2008, and Domain Name Disputes Resolution Policy 1999. This book along with comprehensive relevant up-to-date case laws commentary of all enactments and laws is a perfect description that presents clear explanations of the legal principles, practice, and procedure under governing the rights, duties, and liabilities. The commentary of this book is of utmost benefit for lawyers, judges, bankers, and law students. The first edition is updated to January 2013. It is currently the only book with extensive up-to-date commentary published in Pakistan.

 


Cyber Law Book 6

Authored by Sean P. Melvin.  The text is suitable for any Cyberlaw course, but its approach is unique in the market because the text and cases are centered on entrepreneurship. It covers not only the fundamentals of cyber law and e-commerce regulation in a global business context but also the impact of the law on the technology sector firm itself. It may also fit into an entrepreneurs course or the MBA market. For cyberlaw courses that are not aimed at entrepreneurs, this book's life cycle organization teaches the law in terms of the life of a business.

 


Cyber Law Book 7

Authored by Patricia Bellia, Paul Berman, Brett Frischmann. This law school casebook starts from the premise that cyberlaw is not simply a set of legal rules governing online interaction, but a lens through which to re-examine general problems of policy, jurisprudence, and culture. The book goes beyond simply plugging Internet-related cases into a series of doctrinal categories, instead emphasizing conceptual issues that extend across the spectrum of cyberspace legal dilemmas. While the book addresses all of the “traditional” subject matter areas of cyberlaw, it asks readers to consider both how traditional legal doctrines can be applied to cyberspace conduct, and how the special problems encountered in that application can teach us something about those traditional legal doctrines.The fifth edition has been updated, shortened, and reconceptualized to make the book even more effective as a teaching tool and to illuminate new debates at the heart of this evolving field. The book groups the material into units addressing the who, how, and what of governance/regulation―fundamental questions that pertain to any legal system, in cyberspace or elsewhere. The fifth edition also includes updated treatment throughout, as well as a more stream-lined approach that should make an already effective casebook even more unified and teachable.

 


Cyber Law Book 8

Authored by Jacqueline Lipton. The rapid increase in Internet usage over the past several decades has led to the development of new and essential areas of legislation and legal study. Jacqueline Lipton takes on the thorny question of how to define the field that has come to be known variously as cyberlaw, cyberspace law or internet law. Unlike much of the existing literature, this book tackles the question with the benefit of hindsight and draws on several decades of legal developments in the United States and abroad that help illustrate the scope of the field. The author argues that cyberlaw might best be considered a law of the 'online intermediary,' and that by focusing on the regulation of online conduct by search engines, online retail outlets, Internet service providers and online social networks, a more cohesive and comprehensive concept of cyberlaw may be developed. Topics covered include current comparative and global strategies, suggestions for future approaches to cyberspace regulation, and the creation of a cohesive and comprehensive framework for the cyberlaw field. Providing an excellent summation of current, past and future cyberlaw, this volume will be extremely valuable to students, scholars, policymakers and legal practitioners with an interest in digital information and technology.

 


Cyber Law Book 9

Published by LandMark Publications. This casebook contains a selection of U. S. Court of Appeals decisions that analyze and discuss issues surrounding cyber law. * * * When it passed the Stored Communications Act almost thirty years ago, Congress had as reference a technological context very different from today's Internet-saturated reality. This context affects our construction of the statute now. One historian of the Internet has observed that "before 1988, the New York Times mentioned the Internet only once — in a brief aside." Roy Rosenzweig, Wizards, Bureaucrats, Warriors, and Hackers: Writing the History of the Internet, 103 Am. Hist. Rev. 1530, 1530 (1998). The TCP/IP data transfer protocol — today, the standard for online communication — began to be used by the Department of Defense in about 1980. See Leonard Kleinrock, An Early History of the Internet, IEEE Commc'ns Mag. 26, 35 (Aug. 2010). The World Wide Web was not created until 1990, and we did not even begin calling it that until 1993. Daniel B. Garrie & Francis M. Allegra, Plugged In: Guidebook to Software and the Law § 3.2 (2015 ed.). Thus, a globally-connected Internet available to the general public for routine e-mail and other uses was still years in the future when Congress first took action to protect user privacy. See Craig Partridge, The Technical Development of Internet Email, IEEE Annals of the Hist. of Computing 3, 4 (Apr.-June 2008). Matter of Warrant Search Certain E-mail, 829 F. 3d 197 (2nd Cir. 2016)

 


Cyber Law Book 10

Authored by Pavan Duggal. CYBER SECURITY LAWCyber security is an increasingly important domain today. Countries across the world are concerned about breaches of cyber security which could prejudicially impact their sovereignty and their national security. Consequently, cyber security law as a discipline has emerged. This Book will aim to look at exactly is this emerging discipline of cyber security law. How the said discipline has been defined? What is the significance of cyber security and connected legal, policy, and regulatory issues? How significant is this new discipline of cyber security law likely to be in the coming times? This book has been written in the simple layman language to analyze complicated technical issues connected with legalities concerning breaches of computer networks and computer systems. This Book is authored by Pavan Duggal (http://www.pavanduggal.com), Asia’s and India’s foremost expert on Cyberlaw and Mobile Law, who has been acknowledged as one of the top four cyber lawyers of the world. This Book’s Author runs his niche law firm Pavan Duggal Associates, which is working on all aspects concerning technology and the law.

 


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