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PIL and Internet – connecting factors for online acivity? Tereza Kyselovská
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PIL and internet Jurisdiction Territoriality Sovereignty 2
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Territoriality Territoriality in public international law Primary source of regulatory authority for states State has jurisdiction to act within its territoty Effects doctrine The division of international regulatory authority is organized by reference to territorial criteria 3
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Territoriality Sometimes – „reasonableness“ -> too much flexibility to courts? – The link of the activity to the territory of the regulating state, e.g. The extent to which the activity takes place within the territory, or has substantial, direct and forseeable effect upon or in the territory – Huber, Story 4
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Territoriality Territoriality in private international law Its influence is still pervasive Extreme example – U.S. – presence of the defendant within the territory is sufficient to constitute jurisdiction, regardless of the tenuousness or transitory character of the link between the defendant and the territory (at the time of commencement of proceedings) -> absolute sovereignty? – Ujustified exercise of jurisdiction – Forum non conveniens 5
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Territoriality Huber, Story, Savigny Territorial sovereignty in international law Effectiveness of laws within the territory of a state but not beyond Comity Vested rights Minimum contacts test 6
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Territoriality and globalisation Decline of the state? Reassert the territoriality? Globalization will not undermine territoriality in either public and private international law, but will increase blur between them 7
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PIL in cyberspace Symeon C. Symeonides. Codification and Flexibility in Private International Law „… codes are not monsters… and even they are, they can be trained.“ 8
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PIL in cyberspace Legal certainty and predictability X Flexibility, equity Aristotle 9
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The sliding scale of flexibility 1. Traditional fixed state-selecting rules 10 2. Rules with alternative connecting factors 3. Rules with escape clauses 4. Rules with soft connecting factors 5. Ad hoc approaches
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1. Traditional fixed state-selecting rules Lex loci contractus, lex loci delicti No court discretion 11
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2. Rules with alternative connecting factors E.g. For formal validity – lex loci contractus or lex causae, lex domicilii 12
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Rules with flexible connecting factors Close connection, closest connection More individualized approach Used as: – Main connecting factor – Default rule – Gap-filler 13
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3. Rules with escape clauses Traditionally – ordre public Art. 4/3 Rome I, Art. 4/3 Rome II „clear from all circumstances fo the case“, „manifestly more connected to the case“ Disadvantages – Only in exceptional cases – Again based on territoriality – escape clauses should cure the rule‘s deficienecies, not to reproduce them 14
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4. Rules with soft connecting factors More flexible, less territorial focus, oriented at principles „law that has most significant connection to the parties and the dispute“ „the law of the state whose contacts with the parties and the disputes and whose policies on the disputed issues make application of the state‘s law the most appropriate for those issues“ § 10 ZMPS – rozumné a spravedlivé uspořádání právního vztahu 15
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5. Ad hoc approaches – Court discretion, ad hoc, a posteriori law applicable 16
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5. Ad hoc approaches U.S. – Restatement (Second) – „the goal of the choice of law process is to identify the state that has the most significant relationship“ – the needs of the interstate and international systems – the relevant policies of the forum – the relevant policies of other interested states and the relative interests of those states in the determination of the particular issue – the protection of justified expectations – the basic policies underlying the particular field of law – certainty, predictability and uniformity of result – ease in the determination and application of the law to be applied 17
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5. Ad hoc approaches – U.S. Jurisdiction – due process test 1.Minimum contacts with the forum 2.Fair play and substantial justice 18
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5. Ad hoc approaches – U.S. Minimum contacts – Cunduction of business – Torts – effects doctrine = knowingly, expressly, legal consequences – Jurisdiction – Grosker peer to peer filesharing case – Kalifornie, copyright – Grosker/KaZaa – sídlo v Autrálii, seated in Vanuatu – Zippo scale 19
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Connecting factors - jurisdiction 1. Uninteresting and uncontorversial jurisdictional grounds – Lex domicilii, lex patriae 20
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Connecting factors - jurisdiction 2. Uninteresting and contorversial jurisdictional grounds – Presence of the defendant within the forum 21
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Connecting factors - jurisdiction 3. submission – After the dispute arises – Before the dispute arises 22
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Connecting factors - jurisdiction 4. lex loci contractus 5. the applicable law being the law of the forum 6. contract breached within the forum 7. location of the object of litigation 8. the place of the wrongful act 9. lex loci server 10. forum non conveniens 23
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Summary Modern codifications of PIL – more flexible EU – evolution - new rules, direction of activities… U.S. – revolution – from extreme rigidity (Restatement First) to extreme flexibility (Restatement Second), ad hoc approaches 24
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Geoidentification - Svantesson “We know you are in Brno (CR). This website is only intended for the people of Norway.” Shift from the world's first and only ‘borderless’ communication medium to something that much more resembles our physical world divided by borders of different kinds -> losing one of the greatest benefits of the Internet 25
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Carving up the internet - Schultz Vertical and horizontal fragmentation 26
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TED http://www.ted.com/talks/rebecca_mackinnon_let_s_take_back_the_inte rnet.html http://www.ted.com/talks/rebecca_mackinnon_let_s_take_back_the_inte rnet.html http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zS4deaFRBKI 27
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29 Thank you for your attention PROJECT „THEORY – SKILL – EXPERIENCE“ reg. No. CZ.1.07/2.2.00/15.0198, Operational Program Education for Competitiveness
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