European Commission changes tack on e-commerce law

Published: 30 August 2001 y., Thursday
Officials at the European Commission have made a spectacular turnabout on a proposed law governing cross-border Internet commerce in Europe, deciding to seek input and considering abandoning a long-held position on a key legal question. Justice and home affairs experts drafting a law dubbed "Rome II" will seek consultations with industry and consumer groups, after saying in April that to do so would be a waste of taxpayers money. The authors of the draft regulation further are contemplating abandoning the long-held legal position on the question of which national law to apply in a cross-border dispute. Until now, the officials have advocated applying the laws in the country where a consumer is situated, provoking criticism from industries, including fast-moving consumer goods, e-commerce merchants and publishers, that such an approach will smother e-commerce with legal obligations. "We are not sure whether to set up a special regime for e-commerce or to remove the country-of-destination principle altogether. This has yet to be clarified," said David Seite, one of the authors of the draft regulation. By applying a country-of-origin approach to cross-border online disputes, the regulation will be reinforcing, rather than contradicting existing European legislation such as the e-commerce directive, said an official inside another Commission department. However, he was wary of giving his full support to his justice and home affairs colleagues. "I'll reserve judgment until I see what they come up with," he said.
Šaltinis: idg.net
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

A spectacular turnabout

European Commission changes tack on e-commerce law more »

Australian Regulator Calls For Cybersquatting Ban

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) has called for an end to the practice of cybersquatting and for changes to the way disputes between domain name holders are managed. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

U.S. To Play B2B Matchmaker

Within the next few weeks, the U.S. Department of Commerce, in partnership with IBM, is scheduled to launch a new business-to-business (B2B) e-marketplace to help U.S. sellers hook up with foreign buyers. more »

Hacked EU Site Back Online, But Attack Continues

SaferInternet.org, the European Union-sponsored Web site that was yanked off the Web last week after being hacked twice, is now back online. more »

Web Credibility Project Planned

Consumers Union, the non-profit publisher of "Consumer Reports" magazine, is planning a project to report on the credibility of Web sites, including e-commerce operations. more »

First SDP project

TechEd: Gates announces Shared Development Process more »

Netscape Denies Browser Escape

Netscape Communications is denying reports that it's bailing out of the PC browser market it once dominated. more »

Medicine by e-mail

Joseph Scherger, a family physician in California, was at Chicago's O'Hare Airport last week when he fired up his portable computer, checked his e-mail and found an urgent message from a patient, Beth. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »