Regulating Electronic Commerce
By Michael K. McChrystal, William C. Gleisner III, and
Michael J. Kuborn
hen it comes to money talking, electronic
commerce is the hottest topic of conversation among venture capitalists
in the Silicon Valley as well as among government officials in
Washington, D.C. Internet companies remain the darlings of investors,
attracting 72 percent of the nearly $2 billion invested last year in
start-up companies in the Silicon Valley.1
And in Washington on Nov. 30, 1998, while awaiting his trial on
impeachment charges, President Clinton was able to praise "the broad
bipartisan coalition of members of Congress" that helped the
administration move forward on its framework for global electronic
commerce.2
In Wisconsin electronic commerce recently was
given a boost by a court of appeals decision. In Walgreen Co. v. Wisconsin Pharmacy
Examining Board3 a pharmacy was
censured by the Pharmacy Examining Board for accepting prescriptions by
email. Section
450.11(1) of the Wisconsin Statutes4
permits pharmacies to accept prescriptions from physicians in a writing
signed by the physician or orally, over the phone. The pharmacy board
concluded that an email transmission of a prescription is a writing and
therefore must be signed. The court of appeals disagreed, based on the
"simple facts of computer transmission." The court characterized the
computer communication this way: "The prescription is put into a
computer as text and the message is then electronically transmitted to
the pharmacy's terminal, much as a telephone call - or a facsimile -
would be." As such, it is more akin to a telephoned prescription and
need not be signed. The court even noted the superiority of sending in
prescriptions by email: "Computer transmission presents an advantage
over an oral prescription order ... where the listener must record the
order on paper - by greatly reducing the risk of misunderstanding
because the prescription appears in written form on the pharmacy's
terminal." As this case suggests, electronic commerce often provides an
awkward fit under existing rules designed for other modes of
commerce.
Electronic commerce has been variously defined, as this federal
government definition acknowledges:
"Definitions of electronic commerce vary considerably, but generally,
electronic commerce refers to all forms of commercial transactions
involving organizations and individuals that are based upon the
processing and transmission of digitized data, including text, sound,
and visual images. It also refers to the effects that the electronic
exchange of commercial information may have on the institutions and
processes that support and govern commercial activities. These include
organizational management, commercial negotiations and contracts, legal
and regulatory frameworks, financial settlement arrangements, and
taxation, among many others. The goal of electronic commerce is the
creation of a new kind of commercial environment in an electronic
milieu, in which many of the separate 'steps' that normally intervene
between a buyer and a seller in a commercial transaction can be
integrated and automated electronically, thus minimizing transaction
costs."5
The contemporary paradigm for e-commerce increasingly involves
consumer transactions on the Internet, but older methods of electronic
commerce also are included, such as electronic fund transfers and credit
card transactions.
It's the square peg in the round
hole dilemma. Will we force technology to "fit" existing rules and
regulations for conducting business, or create new rules? |
Electronic commerce has the potential to change the organizational
framework for doing business. Smaller firms, perhaps organized in a less
hierarchical fashion and using employees working from remote locations,
may assume a larger role. Information and communication services become
even more central in the e-commerce economy than in the traditional
economy. Capital costs are different. The skills sought in the workforce
and the terms of workers' employment also may prove to be quite
different. In short, e-commerce is likely to be different from business
as we know it. And this, of course, has serious legal ramifications.
A recent survey discloses that more than half of consumers regard
privacy and security in electronic commerce as their biggest
concerns.6 Businesses and governments also
are concerned about how those issues will be addressed, technologically
and legally. Other key legal issues include fraud (that is,
authenticating the identity of parties to a transaction), taxation, the
protection of intellectual property, jurisdiction of courts, and the
regulation of electronic marketing (for example, "spam").
Privacy
Electronic transactions create a more enduring record or trail than
face-to-face cash transactions. Electronic records can be compiled to
contain some of the most intimate details of a person's private life.
They can be used (or transferred to others) for marketing or other
purposes that may invade the consumer's privacy.
Unlike the European Union (E.U.), which comprehensively regulates the
collection and use of personal data, our approach legally consists of a
hodge-podge of industry-specific legislation, common law principles, and
commercial codes of conduct. Electronic commerce is economically
attractive, in large part, because information flows so freely. Many
consumers, though, avoid electronic transactions because of a fear that
their privacy will be inadequately protected, both as a matter of
commercial practices and the inadequacy of legal protections.
Authenticating the Identity of the Parties
When credit card transactions occur on the Internet, consumers need
to know that they are providing their card numbers to someone they can
trust, and sellers need to know that consumers are who they claim to be.
The use of passwords and "PINs" provide some protection, but because
electronic communications can be illegally intercepted, most experts
agree that greater protection is needed. Electronic authentication
technologies, also called electronic (or digital) signatures, rely on
various forms of encryption to establish the identities of transacting
parties and provide heightened security.
Encryption technology and digital signatures are steadily achieving
legal recognition. Recent legislation in Wisconsin establishes that if
an electronic signature meets standards of uniqueness, security, and
verifiability, it will be given legal recognition equivalent to a
handwritten signature.7 Many states
have adopted comparable legislation.8 As
better electronic signature technologies and practices come into more
common use, the problem of authentication may be substantially solved,
at least for nonroutine transactions and transactions involving frequent
trading partners.
Encryption
Encryption also enhances the security of electronic communications.
Currently, though, encryption is the subject of heated debate in
political and legal circles. Many business concerns have joined with
privacy advocates in criticizing Department of Commerce regulations that
forbid "the transfer of certain encryption software outside the United
States. Unless very difficult precautions are taken, posting software on
the Internet is an export."9 The purpose of
these prohibitions is to impede access by terrorists and other criminals
to communication software that would inhibit or destroy the government's
ability to intercept and interpret communications. Strong encryption
would enable criminals to conspire under the government's very nose. On
the other hand, strong encryption also would permit individuals and
businesses to engage in more secure electronic commerce. The challenge
is to strike the right balance.
Taxation
The Internet Tax Freedom Act,10 passed by Congress last fall, has these
principal features, according to its sponsor:
Three-year moratorium on special taxation of the
Internet. Bars state or local governments from taxing Internet
access (that is, the $19.95 or so that many Americans pay monthly to
America Online, CompuServe, Erol's, or other similar services to access
the Internet) from Oct. 1, 1998, until Oct. 21, 2001. A limited
grandfather clause permits the handful of states already taking steps to
tax Internet access - Connecticut, Wisconsin, Iowa, North Dakota, South
Dakota, New Mexico, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Ohio - to
continue to do so if they can demonstrate that their taxes had already
been "generally imposed and actually enforced" on Internet access
providers prior to Oct. 1, 1998.
Three-year moratorium on multiple and discriminatory taxes on
electronic commerce. Bars state or local governments from
imposing taxes that would subject buyers and sellers of electronic
commerce to taxation in multiple states. Also protects against the
imposition of new tax liability for consumers and vendors involved in
commercial transactions over the Internet, including the application of
discriminatory tax collection requirements imposed on out-of-state
businesses through strained interpretations of "nexus." It also protects
from taxation, for the duration of the moratorium, goods or services
that are sold exclusively over the Internet with no comparable offline
equivalent.
Establish commission to study question of remote
sales. A temporary Advisory Commission on Electronic Commerce
will study electronic commerce tax issues and report back to Congress
after 18 months on whether electronic commerce should be taxed, and if
so, how it can be taxed in a manner that ensures such commerce won't be
subject to special, multiple, or discriminatory taxes. State and local
elected officials will be given a prominent voice on this commission.
Congress, of course, retains full authority to change or discard the
commission's proposals.
No federal taxes. The sense of Congress is that
there should be no federal taxes on Internet access or electronic
commerce. Declares that the Internet should be a tariff-free zone. Calls
on the Clinton Administration to work aggressively through the E.U. and
World Trade Organization (WTO) to keep electronic commerce free from
tariffs and discriminatory taxes. Asks Commerce Department to "report to
Congress on barriers hindering the competitiveness of U.S. businesses
engaged in electronic commerce abroad."11
Significant questions concerning foreign taxes and tariffs on
electronic commerce also will have to be addressed in the months and
years ahead. The United States and European Union issued a Joint
Statement on global electronic commerce that includes a commitment to
"duty-free cyberspace."12 The Internet Tax
Freedom Act and U.S./E.U. Joint Statement reflect the administration's
priority to encourage electronic commerce by protecting it from
additional government-imposed costs.
Jurisdiction
A growing number of cases have addressed the relationship between
sponsoring a Web site through which electronic commerce is conducted and
subjecting oneself to personal jurisdiction in states from which the
site may be accessed. One federal court recently described the state of
the law in these terms:
The goal of electronic commerce is
to create a commercial environment that electronically integrates and
automates the 'steps' in a commercial transaction, thus minimizing
transaction costs. |
"At one end of the scale are circumstances where a defendant
'conducts business' over the Internet with residents of the forum,
allowing for the assertion of personal jurisdiction in most cases. In
such situations, the assertion of jurisdiction is almost always proper.
At the opposite end are situations where a defendant simply posts
information on a Web site which is accessible to users in the forum
state as well as others. 'A passive Web site that does little more than
make information available to those who are interested in it is not
grounds for the exercise of personal jurisdiction.' In the middle are
situations where a defendant operates an interactive Web site, allowing
a user to exchange information with the host computer. In such a case, a
court must review the 'level of interactivity and commercial nature of
the exchange of information' to determine whether jurisdiction should be
exercised."13
Electronic Marketing
Legal issues involving electronic marketing often are novel and
complex. An excellent example is found in Niton Corp. v.
Radiation Monitoring Devices Inc.,14 in which the plaintiff alleged that the
defendant designed its Web site so that efforts to find the plaintiff's
Web site would result in the consumer being directed to defendant's Web
site instead. Web sites are identified by keywords that provide a
description for the site. Web browsers search out sites with keywords
that match the consumer's inquiry. Niton Corp. alleged that the keywords
used by Radiation Monitoring Devices (RMD) to describe several of its
Web pages included the phrase, "The Home Page of Niton Corporation." On
the basis of this and other evidence, District Judge Robert Keeton
issued a preliminary injunction restraining RMD from such deceptive
marketing strategies.
Michael McChrystal, top, Marquette 1975, is a professor of law at the
Marquette University Law School.
William Gleisner, middle, Marquette 1974, both a practicing attorney
and computer consultant, maintains a law firm-based litigation support
service bureau in Milwaukee.
Michael Kuborn, bottom, Marquette 1998, is with Olsen, Kloet,
Gundersen & Conway, and is trained in computer recovery and computer
search and seizure techniques. Products and services mentioned in this
article should not be construed as an endorsement.
|
Another set of legal issues concerns email marketing strategies.
Email marketing, often called "spam," can burden recipients and the
email servers they rely upon by clogging up the system. Efforts to block
spam have resulted in suits both by senders15 and recipients.16
Although legislative assaults on email marketing face considerable First
Amendment hurdles, statutes designed to regulate such marketing have
been enacted in a handful of states17 and
bills are pending in Congress and in many state legislatures.18 In Wisconsin, Senate Bill 33 would significantly
restrict email marketing and, as this is being written, the bill was
passed unanimously by the Senate and is pending before the Assembly.
Conclusion
Electronic commerce fits more or less uneasily into legal rules
designed for face-to-face, written (and signed) or voice communications.
The court of appeals decision in Walgreen illustrates the problem. Email
is neither a telephone/voice communication nor a written (and signed)
communication, although it shares features with each. Yet the Walgreen
court was forced by the statute before it to decide the case on the
basis of which of these different forms of communication email resembled
more. The court made its decision, which may have been a good one in
that it fosters the development of electronic commerce. But the best
solution is probably a rule that considers the strengths and weaknesses
of transmitting prescriptions by email, rather than the strengths and
weaknesses of analogies of email to other forms of communication.
The fact is, electronic commerce is here and the law is going to have
to catch up.
Endnotes
1 "Class
of '98: A boom in e-commerce in record year," San Jose Mercury
News.
2 The President's remarks are
published at the White House Web
site. See "A Framework for Global
Electronic Commerce," the government's strategy statement.
3 No. 97-1513 (Wis. Ct. App.
2/19/98).
4 Wis. Stat.
§ 450.11(1). "Dispensing. No person may dispense any prescribed
drug or device except upon the prescription order of a [physician]. All
prescription orders shall specify the date of issue, the name and
address of the patient, the name and address of the [physician], the
name and quantity of the drug prescribed, directions for the use of the
drug and, if the order is written by the [physician], the signature of
the [physician]. Any oral prescription order shall be immediately
reduced to writing by the pharmacist and filed."
5 The definition is found at a Web site maintained by the
Secretariat for Electronic Commerce, United States Department of
Commerce.
6 As reported on April 9, 1999, by
internet.com,
which calls itself "the e-business and internet technology network". The
concern of consumers about privacy is well documented in surveys
conducted by Louis Harris & Associates and Alan F. Westin and
reported in December 1998 at PrivacyExchange, a Web site
on consumer privacy, e-commerce, and data protection that serves as an
online global information resource and forum.
7 1997 Wis. Act 306.
8 See compilation
of state legislation.
9 Junger v. Christopher/Junger
v. Daley, 8 F. Supp. 2d 708 (N.D. Oh. 7/2/98) (upholding 15 C.F.R.
734.2(b)(9)(ii)(B) against challenges on First Amendment grounds).
10 Public Law 105-277 (Oct. 21,
1998).
11 Comments of Rep. Christopher
Cox (R - Calif.) at his Web site.
12 See text of Joint Statement.
13 Millenium
Enterprises Inc. v. Millenium Music Inc., Civ. No. 98-1058-AA
(D. Ore. 1/4/99), quoting Zippo Manufacturing Co. v. Zippo Dot Com
Inc., 952 F. Supp. 1119, 1124 (W.D. Penn. 1997).
14 27 F. Supp. 2d 102
(D. Mass. 1998).
15 Hartford House Ltd. v.
Microsoft Corp., CV778550 (Santa Clara Supr. Ct. 1/28/99);
(see description
of litigation: "plaintiff alleged that Microsoft modified its
Internet Explorer email software to filter plaintiff's competing
electronic greeting cards, treating plaintiff's product as spam and
sending it to the junk mail folder").
16 See, e.g.,
America Online Inc. v. LCGM Inc., 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20144
(E.D. Va. 11/10/98); (see description
of litigation: "defendants sent unsolicited bulk emails, used AOL
computer systems in excess of their authority, harvested email addresses
of AOL customers, and deceptively used 'aol.com' in its spam
headers").
17 Including
California, Maryland, Nevada, and Washington.
18 John Marshall Law School
Center for Information Technology & Privacy Law maintains a Web
site that tracks such legislation.
Wisconsin Lawyer