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download the IT Act 2000.
Cyber Laws in India
In May 2000, both the houses of the Indian Parliament passed the Information Technology
Bill. The Bill received the assent of the President in August 2000 and came to be
known as the Information Technology Act, 2000. Cyber laws are contained in the IT Act,
2000.
This Act aims to provide the legal infrastructure for e-commerce in India. And the cyber
laws have a major impact for e-businesses and the new economy in India. So, it is
important to understand what are the various perspectives of the IT Act, 2000 and what it
offers.
The Information Technology Act, 2000 also aims to provide for the legal framework so that
legal sanctity is accorded to all electronic records and other activities carried out by
electronic means. The Act states that unless otherwise agreed, an acceptance of contract
may be expressed by electronic means of communication and the same shall have legal
validity and enforceability. Some highlights of the Act are listed
below:
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Chapter-II of the Act specifically stipulates that any subscriber may
authenticate an electronic record by affixing his digital signature. It further states
that any person can verify an electronic record by use of a public key of the subscriber.
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Chapter-III of the Act details about Electronic Governance and provides inter
alia amongst others that where any law provides that information or any other matter shall
be in writing or in the typewritten or printed form, then, notwithstanding anything
contained in such law, such requirement shall be deemed to have been satisfied if such
information or matter is -
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rendered or made available in an electronic form; and |
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accessible so as to be usable for a subsequent reference |
The said chapter also details the legal recognition of Digital Signatures.
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Chapter-IV of the said Act gives a scheme for Regulation of Certifying
Authorities. The Act envisages a Controller of Certifying Authorities who shall perform
the function of exercising supervision over the activities of the Certifying Authorities
as also laying down standards and conditions governing the Certifying Authorities as also
specifying the various forms and content of Digital Signature Certificates. The Act
recognizes the need for recognizing foreign Certifying Authorities and it further details
the various provisions for the issue of license to issue Digital Signature Certificates.
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Chapter-VII of the Act details about the scheme of things relating to Digital
Signature Certificates. The duties of subscribers are also enshrined in the said Act.
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Chapter-IX of the said Act talks about penalties and adjudication for various
offences. The penalties for damage to computer, computer systems etc. has been fixed as
damages by way of compensation not exceeding Rs. 1,00,00,000 to affected persons. The Act
talks of appointment of any officers not below the rank of a Director to the Government of
India or an equivalent officer of state government as an Adjudicating Officer who shall
adjudicate whether any person has made a contravention of any of the provisions of the
said Act or rules framed there under. The said Adjudicating Officer has been given the
powers of a Civil Court.
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Chapter-X of the Act talks of the establishment of the Cyber Regulations
Appellate Tribunal, which shall be an appellate body where appeals against the orders
passed by the Adjudicating Officers, shall be preferred.
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Chapter-XI of the Act talks about various offences and the said offences shall be
investigated only by a Police Officer not below the rank of the Deputy Superintendent of
Police. These offences include tampering with computer source documents, publishing of
information, which is obscene in electronic form, and hacking.
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The Act also provides for the constitution of the Cyber Regulations Advisory
Committee, which shall advice the government as regards any rules, or for any other
purpose connected with the said act. The said Act also proposes to amend the Indian Penal
Code, 1860, the Indian Evidence Act, 1872, The Bankers' Books Evidence Act, 1891, The
Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934 to make them in tune with the provisions of the IT Act.
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Advantages of Cyber Laws
The IT Act 2000 attempts to change outdated laws and provides ways to deal with cyber
crimes. We need such laws so that people can perform purchase transactions over the Net
through credit cards without fear of misuse. The Act offers the much-needed legal
framework so that information is not denied legal effect, validity or enforceability,
solely on the ground that it is in the form of electronic records.
In view of the growth in transactions and communications carried out through electronic
records, the Act seeks to empower government departments to accept filing, creating and
retention of official documents in the digital format. The Act has also proposed a legal
framework for the authentication and origin of electronic records / communications through
digital signature.
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From the perspective of e-commerce in India, the IT Act 2000 and its provisions
contain many positive aspects. Firstly, the implications of these provisions for the
e-businesses would be that email would now be a valid and legal form of communication in
our country that can be duly produced and approved in a court of law.
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Companies shall now be able to carry out electronic commerce using the legal
infrastructure provided by the Act.
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Digital signatures have been given legal validity and sanction in the Act.
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The Act throws open the doors for the entry of corporate companies in the
business of being Certifying Authorities for issuing Digital Signatures Certificates.
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The Act now allows Government to issue notification on the web thus heralding
e-governance.
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The Act enables the companies to file any form, application or any other document
with any office, authority, body or agency owned or controlled by the appropriate
Government in electronic form by means of such electronic form as may be prescribed by the
appropriate Government.
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The IT Act also addresses the important issues of security, which are so critical
to the success of electronic transactions. The Act has given a legal definition to the
concept of secure digital signatures that would be required to have been passed through a
system of a security procedure, as stipulated by the Government at a later date.
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Under the IT Act,
2000, it shall now be possible for corporates to have a statutory remedy in case if anyone
breaks into their computer systems or network and causes damages or copies data. The
remedy provided by the Act is in the form of monetary damages, not exceeding Rs. 1 crore.

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