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Computer Law

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Journal

2010

CyberCrime

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Law

Disloyal Computer Use And The Computer Fraud And Abuse Act: Narrowing The Scope, Greg Pollaro Aug 2010

Disloyal Computer Use And The Computer Fraud And Abuse Act: Narrowing The Scope, Greg Pollaro

Duke Law & Technology Review

Congress drafted the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA) to protect government interest computers from malicious attacks by hackers. As computer use has expanded in the years since its enactment, the CFAA has similarly expanded to cover a number of computer-related activities. This iBrief discusses the extension of the CFAA into the employer/employee context, suggests that this goes beyond the Act's express purpose, compares the different approaches taken by the circuit courts in applying the CFAA to disloyal computer use by employees, and argues that the more recent approach taken by the Ninth Circuit provides a better model for determining …


Substantially Justified? The U.S. Government’S Use Of Name-Check Technologies In Naturalization Procedures, H. Jin Cho Jun 2010

Substantially Justified? The U.S. Government’S Use Of Name-Check Technologies In Naturalization Procedures, H. Jin Cho

Duke Law & Technology Review

The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services relies upon the Federal Bureau of Investigation to administer the National Name Check Program, which conducts background checks on applicants for naturalization. Backlogs have led to long delays for aspiring citizens and significant legal problems for the government.

This iBrief examines the First Circuit’s ruling in Aronov v. Napolitano that an eighteen-month delay in adjudicating a naturalization application was substantially justified. While the government’s inefficiency can be explained partly by an understaffed bureaucracy, overwhelming evidence suggests that these problems are exacerbated by a technological infrastructure that is ill-equipped to handle the scope of the …


Cyber Warfare And The Crime Of Aggression: The Need For Individual Accountability On Tomorrow’S Battlefield, Jonathan A. Ophardt Feb 2010

Cyber Warfare And The Crime Of Aggression: The Need For Individual Accountability On Tomorrow’S Battlefield, Jonathan A. Ophardt

Duke Law & Technology Review

As cyberspace matures, the international system faces a new challenge in confronting the use of force. Non-State actors continue to grow in importance, gaining the skill and the expertise necessary to wage asymmetric warfare using non-traditional weaponry that can create devastating real-world consequences. The international legal system must adapt to this battleground and provide workable mechanisms to hold aggressive actors accountable for their actions. The International Criminal Court--the only criminal tribunal in the world with global reach--holds significant promise in addressing this threat. The Assembly of State Parties should construct the definition of aggression to include these emerging challenges. By …