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Published Nov 2009
Hardcover,
350 pp

List Price: RM 295.00
  USD 78.00
(10% of the listed price will be added for shipping addresses outside Malaysia)

Information and Communication Technology Law, State, Internet and Information


Abu Bakar MUNIR and Siti Hajar MOHD YASIN

ISBN / ISSN:  978-967-5040-32-0

Information is the oxygen of democracy. If people do not know what is happening in their society, then they cannot take a meaningful part in the affairs of that society. Information belongs not to the state, the government of the day or civil servants, but to the public. The Internet is a present day phenomenon which has helped spread information and made it readily available and widely accessible all around the world.

 
The rapid development and usage of information and communication technology (ICT) have brought along many crucial issues which confront society today. While websites, blogs, electronic commerce and social networking sites have broken down physical boundaries and made today’s world an information society, these services also raise problems that challenge governments and the people alike. Invasion of privacy, phishing and loss of personal data, cybercrime, cyberporn, online defamation, cyber warfare and damage caused by computer viruses are amongst the serious issues which have to be tackled.
 
This book critically introduces and discusses the legal and regulatory challenges faced by the state and the society in relation to the Internet and information. It also deals with how ICT can be utilised to deliver justice more efficiently. This is a book which should prove useful to lawyers, in-house counsel, policy-makers, business owners and IT professionals in particular as well as the public in general.

CONTENT

Chapter
Title
1
Information: Oxygen for Democracy
 
2
Sunshine is the Best Disinfectants
 
3
Right to Information: Foundational and Fundamental
 
4
Freedom of Information Law: The Case for Malaysia
 
5
Electronic Commerce Act 2006: An Oversight or Wanting a Different or…?
 
6
Another Law with Flaws: Lesson Never Learnt
 
7
Social Networking Sites: Make Them Safer for the Young
 
8
Cyber Warfare: Legal and Policy Challenges
 
9
Policing Cybercrime and Cyberporn: International and Malaysian Experiences
 
10
Access to Communications Data by Public Authorities
 
11
Retention of Communications Data: Security vs Privacy
 
12
Privcay and Data Protection: Never Mind the Rules
 
13
The General Consumer Code: Five Years After
 
14
Conflicting Bills: DNA vs PDP
 
15
Googling Data Protection: Don’t Be Evil
 
16
Google vs EU Working Party: Disagreements Remain
 
17
Phishing: Would the Legislative Bait Bite?
 
18
Aggregate or Be Aggregated: Legal and Regulatory Challenges
 
19
E-Justice: International Experiences and the Potential for Malaysia
 

Readership
Lawyers, in-house counsel, policy-makers, business owners and IT Professionals

Jurisdiction
Malaysia