Great analysis Harry, Marcel et al,

What do you guys have to say about the 'merger' between the e-transactions and the ICT-Bill, where language from the e-transaction drafts has been incorporated into the ICT Bill?

Regards,

Brian

On Tue, Jul 8, 2008 at 10:10 AM, Harry Hare <harry@africanedevelopment.org> wrote:

Dear Marcel,

 

Good review of the proposed bills. I happen to have participated in the preparation of the Draft e-Transaction Bill and would like to respond to some of the concerns in my own capacity as a Kenyan citizen. Another caveat is that apart from attending a one week course on legal aspects of e-Commerce, law is a stranger in my being. See my responses to the specific issues the analysis raises below:

 

Harry

 

1.     Provisions on who can prosecute are missing

 

This is actually covered in Schedule C, under the investigations of offenses section and article 21 gives the commissioner of police the authority to prosecute. Under the same section, there is a proposal to constitute special investigation unit on cyber crime.

 

2.     Liability of Internet Service Providers must be demarcated

 

You may want to be abit elaborate on this. Part IV of the proposed bill tries to indemnify service providers from third party felonies. Would you prefer for instance that we have data providers and internet service providers as separate have separate limitations?

 

3. Clarification on which commercial documents are excluded from proposed legislation

 

In the initial drafts of the proposed law, the documents had been listed as title deeds, bearer bonds and letter of credit; this is actually best practise as proposed by the UNCITRAL models laws on e-commerce. The concept tries not to cover documents that can be exchanged for cash/service or goods.

 

4. Eliminate any ambiguity on admissibility of electronic evidence

 

The question of admissibility of electronic evidence is covered very well in Schedule B which has proposed amendments to the Evidence Act. I do not see any ambiguity in this section unless you can point out something specific.

 

5. Need for data protection and privacy provisions

 

Articles 31-34 of the proposed bill covers protection of private information. Is this insufficient?

 

 

6. The Bills are more lenient on e-commerce fraud than on traditional fraud

 

Might need some research on this.

 

7. Remove inconsistencies in determining crimes and punishments

 

I tend to agree with the analysis here...for instance spamming the proposed fine is 200,000 and spoofing the proposed fine is 2m. May need some reworking in line with the weight of the offence.

 

8. Provisions for the inclusion of cyber-crime within the scope of the Extradition Act

 

The bill proposes that the clause "all the crimes mentioned in the Electronic Transactions Bill 2007", this clause enough to amend the Extradition Act to include the crimes that have been identified in the proposed bill.

 

9. Creation of an Administrator for e-commerce laws whose functions will be policy implementation and advisory, as a multi-sectoral body with industry associationsincluding KIF, lead regulator communications Commission of Kenya and co-regulator

Central Bank of Kenya

 

We belaboured on this and initially came up with a proposal to have a multi-stakeholder agency, akin to KENIC, to administer the act but after long discussions and consultations, the team was unable to come out as boldly as you did for several reasons.

 

i)              We were aware of the fact that proposing the creation of a new body has some budgetary implications and therefore would slow down the process of enacting the law.

ii)             The Bill was developed towards the end of last year, the mood at that time was that anything that went to parliament had the risk of being politicised and therefore aligning the bill to specific institutions was suicidal

 

From: kictanet-bounces+harry=africanedevelopment.org@lists.kictanet.or.ke [mailto:kictanet-bounces+harry=africanedevelopment.org@lists.kictanet.or.ke] On Behalf Of Marcel Werner
Sent: 06 July 2008 17:44


To: harry@africanedevelopment.org
Cc: secretariat@kif.or.ke; KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions
Subject: [kictanet] Legislation and Regulation for e-Commerce in Kenya

 

Legislation and Regulation for e-Commerce in Kenya

Kenya ICT Federation (KIF) - Briefing Note # 3  - Report - Public Panel 19 June 2008

Electronic commerce (e-commerce) will add at least one percent point growth to Kenya's overall economic growth within five years. This is contingent upon the adoption of legislation that supports electronic transactions. Kenya, as an emerging economy and regional leader, lags behind in having a legal framework for e-commerce in place. The current situation is an anachronism hampering national development, placing provincial centres at a disadvantage, and harming global competitiveness. Both external and internal trade require the new framework.The Kenyan private sector strongly supports e-commerce legislation, as well as legislation of the Information and Communication Technology sector that guarantees an open market and promotes innovation.

Why e-commerce law? Today, legislation supporting electronic transactions represents the single most powerful innovation opportunity in the legal framework of the ICT sector. Legislation is needed to:
-Legalize e-commerce transactions by recognizing an electronic signature
-Manage and control e-commerce risks
-Remove e-commerce barriers
KIF has studied drafts currently circulating in the public domain, the Information and Communications Bill, 2008, and the Electronic Transactions Bill, 2007, respectively, both of which are of the highest technical standards. Public panels and hearings with sectors of the economy (including tourism, agriculture, ICT) have been held on 6th and 27th May, 4th June and 19th June. The Kenyan private sector has expressed overwhelming support for urgent legislation of e-commerce.

Suggested improvements in Bills - The public panels and hearings to date have yielded the following important issues for improvement in the current Bills:

-          Provisions on who can prosecute are missing

-          Liability of Internet Service Providers must be demarcated

-          Clarification on which commercial documents are excluded from proposed legislation

-          Eliminate any ambiguity on admissibility of electronic evidence

-          Need for data protection and privacy provisions

-          The Bills are more lenient on e-commerce fraud than on traditional fraud

-          Remove inconsistencies in determining crimes and punishments

-          Provisions for the inclusion of cyber-crime within the scope of the Extradition Act

-          Creation of an Administrator for e-commerce laws whose functions will be policy implementation and advisory, as a multi-sectoral body with industry associations including KIF, lead regulator Communications Commission of Kenya and co-regulator Central Bank of Kenya

Gains in tourism, agriculture, healthcare

Industry sectors, notably the tourism industry, are expressing their desire to see e-commerce covered by law. In tourism, on-line travel bookings have exceeded 80% in the USA and 50% in Europe. Decline in off-line bookings is in ample evidence. Those destinations that cannot legally support abundant on-line booking, such as Kenya, will loose market share. E-commerce in agriculture will improve small-holder's living standards. Great impact is expected notably in the coffee sector that provides livelihood to at least 5 million Kenyans, as well as in the dairy industry. Healthcare efficiency and affordability will improve by on-line health data management systems. Business operators in rural towns and rural centres have also expressed keen interest, as they see scope to address issues of trade efficiency and security in rural Kenya.

What is e-commerce

E-commerce is a method of trading that replaces paper-based documentation by a mutually binding electronic protocol between buyers and sellers. E-commerce is gaining ground globally and has become an irreversible trend. Many trading partners are already practicing e-commerce, by mutual agreement, also in Kenya. However, e-commerce will reach its full potential when parties that do not know each other are able to trade with full mutual protection under the law. This will benefit large numbers of consumers and businesses, including small-holder farmers, tourism operators, small-scale industry and services providers in almost any business sector.

About KIF

The Kenya Information and Communication Technology Federation (KIF) represents the ICT industry with Government and with private sector bodies e.g. Kenya Association of Manufacturers and Kenya Private Sector Alliance KEPSA. KIF is a legally registered membership based Association, made up of trade associations and professional bodies within the national ICT industry, as well as commercial corporations. KIF has been accepted as the private sector voice of ICT by Government. KIF contributes ideas to key sectors like healthcare, education, agriculture, construction industry, and last but not least supports e-government development. KIF is a membership-driven organisation. Members bring issues on public policy and industry development forward for KIF to take action. Issues include: innovation promotion, education improvement, duties, taxes and levies, rural ICT investment. KIF has a strong and active network, with excellent relationships with all government agencies. KIF membership is open for market segment associations and individual companies. Membership charges are annual and based on company size. Contact: secretariat@kif.or.ke, 020 4440102

MARCEL WERNER, Chairman, Kenya ICT Federation

please send any business mail to:
Marcel.Werner@innovation-africa.or.ke

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