{"title":"没有警察执勤:电子商贸及网络罪案执法不力","authors":"Peter P. Swire","doi":"10.2139/ssrn.1135704","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This essay gives new reasons why we should expect underenforcement for E-commerce, cybercrime, and Internet harms more broadly. It also recommends a strategy for addressing that underenforcement, focusing on more federal or federated enforcement. The essay stresses an information problem and a commons problem that have largely been overlooked to date. In brief, the information problem arises because only a tiny fraction of complaints and knowledge about an online fraudster or criminal comes from each jurisdiction. Enforcers thus lack the informational basis for telling good guys from bad guys. Priority bad guys are thus less likely to become the targets for enforcement. This information problem is compounded by a commons problem. In light of the incentives facing enforcement agencies, priority will typically go to cases where many or all of the victims are local. No one will have the incentive to give priority to harms that occur across borders. This is a classic commons problem, because cross-border harms will be left to someone else. In short, no one will own these problems, and there will be underenforcement. These information and commons problems exacerbate the forensic problem that has been the focus of the greatest legal attention to date, the problem that it is often technically and legally difficult to gather evidence where the perpetrator is physically distant from the victim. The basic response should be to shift toward more federal and federated enforcement. Federal enforcement means a greater role, compared to offline activity, for the Federal Trade Commission in consumer protection and the Department of Justice for cybercrime. Federated enforcement means building new structures, compared to offline activity, to share information among local enforcers and to encourage local enforcers to bring more enforcement actions even when the perpetrator and many of the victims are outside of their jurisdiction. Part I of the essay explains the information, commons, and forensic problems in greater depth, and explores policy and legal responses to those problems. Part II responds to five possible critiques, which I call: (1) The Internet hasn't really changed anything; (2) Enforcement works better on the Internet; (3) We actually don't want enforcement for what's done on the Internet; (4) States need to be the laboratories of experimentation; and (5) The Feds don't do small potatoes.","PeriodicalId":376821,"journal":{"name":"White Collar Crime eJournal","volume":"11 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2008-05-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"27","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"No Cop on the Beat: Underenforcement in E-Commerce and Cybercrime\",\"authors\":\"Peter P. Swire\",\"doi\":\"10.2139/ssrn.1135704\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"This essay gives new reasons why we should expect underenforcement for E-commerce, cybercrime, and Internet harms more broadly. It also recommends a strategy for addressing that underenforcement, focusing on more federal or federated enforcement. The essay stresses an information problem and a commons problem that have largely been overlooked to date. In brief, the information problem arises because only a tiny fraction of complaints and knowledge about an online fraudster or criminal comes from each jurisdiction. Enforcers thus lack the informational basis for telling good guys from bad guys. Priority bad guys are thus less likely to become the targets for enforcement. This information problem is compounded by a commons problem. In light of the incentives facing enforcement agencies, priority will typically go to cases where many or all of the victims are local. No one will have the incentive to give priority to harms that occur across borders. This is a classic commons problem, because cross-border harms will be left to someone else. In short, no one will own these problems, and there will be underenforcement. These information and commons problems exacerbate the forensic problem that has been the focus of the greatest legal attention to date, the problem that it is often technically and legally difficult to gather evidence where the perpetrator is physically distant from the victim. The basic response should be to shift toward more federal and federated enforcement. Federal enforcement means a greater role, compared to offline activity, for the Federal Trade Commission in consumer protection and the Department of Justice for cybercrime. Federated enforcement means building new structures, compared to offline activity, to share information among local enforcers and to encourage local enforcers to bring more enforcement actions even when the perpetrator and many of the victims are outside of their jurisdiction. 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引用次数: 27
摘要
这篇文章给出了新的理由,为什么我们应该期待对电子商务、网络犯罪和更广泛的互联网危害执法不力。它还建议了一项解决执法不足的战略,重点是更多的联邦或联邦执法。这篇文章强调了一个信息问题和一个公共问题,这在很大程度上被忽视了。简而言之,信息问题的出现是因为来自各个司法管辖区的关于网络诈骗者或罪犯的投诉和知识只有很小一部分。因此,执法者缺乏区分好人和坏人的信息基础。因此,优先处理的坏人不太可能成为执法的目标。这个信息问题与一个公共问题结合在一起。鉴于执法机构面临的激励措施,通常会优先处理许多或全部受害者都是当地人的案件。没有人会有动机优先考虑跨境发生的危害。这是一个典型的公地问题,因为跨界损害将留给其他人。简而言之,没有人会为这些问题负责,而且执法力度也会不足。这些信息和公共问题加剧了迄今为止最受法律关注的法医问题,即在犯罪人离受害者很远的情况下,往往在技术上和法律上难以收集证据。基本的反应应该是转向更多的联邦和联邦执法。联邦执法意味着,与线下活动相比,联邦贸易委员会(Federal Trade Commission)在消费者保护方面和司法部(Department of Justice)在网络犯罪方面要发挥更大的作用。与线下活动相比,联合执法意味着建立新的结构,在地方执法人员之间共享信息,并鼓励地方执法人员采取更多的执法行动,即使犯罪者和许多受害者不在他们的管辖范围内。文章的第一部分更深入地解释了信息、公地和司法问题,并探讨了对这些问题的政策和法律反应。第二部分回应了五种可能的批评,我称之为:(1)互联网并没有真正改变任何事情;(2)互联网执法效果更好;(3)实际上,我们不希望对互联网上的行为进行强制执行;(4)国家需要成为实验的实验室;(5)联邦调查局不做小事。
No Cop on the Beat: Underenforcement in E-Commerce and Cybercrime
This essay gives new reasons why we should expect underenforcement for E-commerce, cybercrime, and Internet harms more broadly. It also recommends a strategy for addressing that underenforcement, focusing on more federal or federated enforcement. The essay stresses an information problem and a commons problem that have largely been overlooked to date. In brief, the information problem arises because only a tiny fraction of complaints and knowledge about an online fraudster or criminal comes from each jurisdiction. Enforcers thus lack the informational basis for telling good guys from bad guys. Priority bad guys are thus less likely to become the targets for enforcement. This information problem is compounded by a commons problem. In light of the incentives facing enforcement agencies, priority will typically go to cases where many or all of the victims are local. No one will have the incentive to give priority to harms that occur across borders. This is a classic commons problem, because cross-border harms will be left to someone else. In short, no one will own these problems, and there will be underenforcement. These information and commons problems exacerbate the forensic problem that has been the focus of the greatest legal attention to date, the problem that it is often technically and legally difficult to gather evidence where the perpetrator is physically distant from the victim. The basic response should be to shift toward more federal and federated enforcement. Federal enforcement means a greater role, compared to offline activity, for the Federal Trade Commission in consumer protection and the Department of Justice for cybercrime. Federated enforcement means building new structures, compared to offline activity, to share information among local enforcers and to encourage local enforcers to bring more enforcement actions even when the perpetrator and many of the victims are outside of their jurisdiction. Part I of the essay explains the information, commons, and forensic problems in greater depth, and explores policy and legal responses to those problems. Part II responds to five possible critiques, which I call: (1) The Internet hasn't really changed anything; (2) Enforcement works better on the Internet; (3) We actually don't want enforcement for what's done on the Internet; (4) States need to be the laboratories of experimentation; and (5) The Feds don't do small potatoes.