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Cybercrime's Scope: Interpreting 'Access' and 'Authorization' in Computer Misuse Statutes
Cybercrime's Scope: Interpreting 'Access' and 'Authorization' in Computer Misuse StatutesKerr, Orin S., "Cybercrime's Scope: Interpreting 'Access' and 'Authorization' in Computer Misuse Statutes" . NYU Law Review, Vol. 78, No. 5, pp. 1596-1668, November 2003 Abstract:
This Article presents a comprehensive inquiry into the meaning of unauthorized access statutes. It begins by explaining why legislatures enacted unauthorized access statutes, and why early beliefs that such statutes solved the problem of computer misuse have proved remarkably naïve. Next, the Article explains how the courts have construed these statutes in an overly broad way that threatens to criminalize a surprising range of innocuous conduct involving computers. In the final section, the Article offers a normative proposal for interpreting access and authorization. This section argues that courts should reject a contract theory of authorization, and should narrow the scope of unauthorized access statutes to circumvention of code-based restrictions on computer privileges. The section justifies this proposal on several grounds. First, the proposal will best mediate the line between securing privacy and protecting the liberty of Internet users. Second, the proposal mirrors criminal law's traditional treatment of crimes that contain a consent element. Third, the proposed approach is consistent with the basic theories of punishment. Fourth, the proposed interpretation avoids possible constitutional difficulties that may arise under the broader constructions that courts recently have favored.
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