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あらすじ・解説
Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA) of 1986 is a controversial US law addressing computer crime – not only seeking to establish behavioral norms online, but also contributing to enforcement misuse/overreach with unintended consequences offline... History of CFAA legislationUS v Matthew Keys (2012)US v Derrick Lostutter (2017)HiQ Labs v LinkedIn (2019)US v Aaron Swartz (2011)"Unauthorized access" (web scraping and who owns data?)Safe harbor for ethical/white hat security researchersTerms of service (ToS) violations"Demonstrable harm" (proportionality of crime vs punishment)Aaron's LawTradeoffs of CFAA and reform thereof (free speech/privacy/AI/ML/etc) This podcast is Al-generated with NotebookLM, using the following sources, research, and analysis: California Comprehensive Computer Data Access and Fraud Act (Wikipedia, 2024.12.12)Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (Wikipedia, 2024.12.12)Critical Fixes for the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (EFF, 2013.01.29)Department of Justice Announces New Policy for Charging Cases under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (DOJ, 2022.05.19)Explanation of effects of Aaron’s Law with EFF proposed amendments to “access without authorization” (EFF public discussion draft, 2013.01.23)Is It Time to Rethink the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act? (GovTech, 2023.02.15)Justice Manual 9-48.000: Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (DOJ, 2022.05)Legal Risks of Adversarial Machine Learning Research (Kumar/Penney/Schneier/Albert, 2020.06.29)Rebooting Computer Crime Law Part 1: No Prison Time For Violating Terms of Service (EFF, 2013.02.04)Rebooting Computer Crime Law Part 2: Protect Tinkerers, Security Researchers, Innovators, and Privacy Seekers (EFF, 2013.02.04)Rebooting Computer Crime Part 3: The Punishment Should Fit the Crime (EFF, 2013.02.08)The Case to Update the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (GW Law, 2021.04.03)The Mirage of Artificial Intelligence Terms of Use Restrictions (Henderson/Lemley, 2024.12.10)Why the Government Went After Matthew Keys (Vice, 2015.10.09) Not investment advice; do your own due diligence! # cybersecurity cybercrime hackers hacktivism felony legal regulation social media networking internet IRL 1A