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It May Be Secure, But Is It Legal?

Abstract

Most Security Policies are geared towards preventing hacker-vandals. However, impersonator-hackers can be more insidious. How do you ensure that a third-party cannot forge your online signature and commit you to an un-wanted obligation? Conversely, how do you ensure that a third party cannot renege on an agreement that is favorable to you by claiming that their online signature was forged?

This presentation: (1) summarizes the fundamental issues (Is an electronic contract worth the bandwidth it's written on? What exactly is a digital signature? How does it differ from an electronic signature? Are they legally binding?); (2) examines digital signing from both a person-to-machine and a machine-to-machine ("M2M") perspective; and (3) suggests a practical approach to legal-security in each case.

Keywords


The full paper was not available at the time the proceedings were created. Please check the conference web site, http://www.xmleurope.com, to find an updated version of this paper.

Biography

Sean qualified as a Commercial Litigation Lawyer with London City law firm, DJ Freeman. He worked in London as an in-house Legal Advisor to Shell U.K. Limited before moving to Burberry Limited to co-manage the legal aspects of Burberry's Intellectual Property portfolio and other global sales activities. In Ireland, as the Market Operations Lawyer to the ODTR, the Irish Telecommunications Regulator, Sean had specific responsibility for Internet inter-connect issues in the Irish market. Sean is in charge of in-house legal services.