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In Indian law, cyber crime has to be voluntary
and willful, an act or omission that adversely
affects a person or property. The IT Act
provides the backbone for e-commerce and India’s
approach has been to look at e-governance and
e-commerce primarily from the promotional
aspects looking at the vast opportunities and
the need to sensitize the population to the
possibilities of the information age. There is
the need to take in to consideration the
security aspects.
Until recently, many
information technology (IT) professionals lacked
awareness of and interest in the cyber crime phenomenon.
In many cases, law enforcement officers have lacked the
tools needed to tackle the problem; old laws didn’t
quite fit the crimes being committed, new laws hadn’t
quite caught up to the reality of what was happening,
and there were few court precedents to look to for
guidance. Furthermore, debates over privacy issues
hampered the ability of enforcement agents to gather the
evidence needed to prosecute these new cases. Finally,
there was a certain amount of antipathy—or at the least,
distrust— between the two most important players in any
effective fight against cyber crime: law enforcement
agencies and computer professionals. Yet
close cooperation between the two is crucial if we are
to control the cyber crime problem and make the Internet
a safe “place” for its users.
Law enforcement personnel understand the criminal
mindset and know the basics of gathering evidence and
bringing offenders to justice. IT personnel understand
computers and networks, how they work, and how to track
down information on them. Each has half of the key to
defeating the cyber criminal. IT professionals need good
definitions of cybercrime in order to know when (and
what) to report to police, but law enforcement agencies
must have statutory definitions of specific crimes in
order to charge a criminal with an offense. The first
step in specifically defining individual cybercrimes is
to sort all the acts that can be considered cybercrimes
into organized categories.
In Indian law, cyber crime has to be voluntary and
willful, an act or omission that adversely affects a
person or property. The IT Act provides the backbone for
e-commerce and India’s approach has been to look at
e-governance and e-commerce primarily from the
promotional aspects looking at the vast opportunities
and the need to sensitize the population to the
possibilities of the information age. There is the need
to take in to consideration the security aspects.
Courtsey: An Article by
Talwant Singh Addl. Distt. & Sessions Judge, Delhi
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