UK:
E-Commerce News - Cybercrime
04 October 2002
by
Herbert Smith Freehills
To print this article, all you need is to be registered or login on Mondaq.com.
Denial
of service attacks have been featured in the media on numerous occasion in
recent years. In its simplest form it involves bombarding a website with
nonsensical emails until the data buffer for the website is exceeded. The
website is then prevented from receiving further emails. This is clearly
disastrous for any business that relies on email to receive orders from
users (e.g. an online bookshop). Unfortunately the existing Computer
Misuse Act 1990 was passed before the widespread use of the internet and
so does not specifically prohibit such malicious attacks. Criminal
offences under the existing Act are based on the criteria of unauthorised
access or unauthorised data modification. Denial of service attacks aimed
at publicly available websites do not do not neatly fit within those
criteria.
The Computer Misuse (Amendment) Bill, currently before Parliament,
seeks to introduce a new criminal offence relating to denial of service.
Denial of service is defined in the Bill as causing a function of a
computer system to degrade, be impaired or fail without the authorisation
of the owner. The Bill, which amends the existing Computer Misuse Act
1990, criminalizes any action, proposed or carried out, which impairs the
function of a system. If the action is actually carried out, intent to
impair the system is not required provided the effect could have been
anticipated from an objective standpoint. The Bill is seen by many in the
industry as a significant step towards ensuring the existing Act can
combat current computing crimes.
The Bill is expected to pass during the next session of Parliament,
which is due to start on October 15.
Please click
through for a copy of the Bill.
© Herbert Smith 2002
The content of this article does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied on as such. Specific advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.
For more information on this or other Herbert Smith publications, please email us.
POPULAR ARTICLES ON: Media, Telecoms, IT, Entertainment from UK
ASA Revises Calvin Klein Ruling
Osborne Clarke
On 6 March 2024, the ASA after careful considerations, republished its ruling on Calvin Klein's April 2023 marketing campaign.