Advanced search Help
Searching for terms: EXACT: "CRS Report for Congress, RS20830" in: series
Clear all search criteria
Only 2/3! You are seeing results from the Public Collection, not the complete Full Collection. Sign in to search everything (see eligibility).
-
Cybercrime: A Sketch of 18 U.S.C. 1030 and Related Federal Criminal Laws [October 15, 2014]
From the Summary: "The Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA), 18 U.S.C. 1030, outlaws conduct that victimizes computer systems. It is a cyber security law. It protects federal computers, bank computers, and computers connected to the Internet. It shields them from trespassing, threats, damage, espionage, and from being corruptly used as instruments of fraud. It is not a comprehensive provision, but instead it fills cracks and gaps in the protection afforded by other federal criminal laws. This is a brief sketch of CFAA and some of its federal statutory companions, including the amendments found in the Identity Theft Enforcement and Restitution Act, P.L. 110-326, 122 Stat. 3560 (2008)."
Library of Congress. Congressional Research Service
Doyle, Charles
2014-10-15
-
Cybercrime: A Sketch of 18 U.S.C. 1030 and Related Federal Criminal Laws [December 27, 2010]
From the Summary:"The federal computer fraud and abuse statute, 18 U.S.C. [United States Code] 1030, outlaws conduct that victimizes computer systems. It is a computer security law. It protects computers in which there is a federal interest--federal computers, bank computers, and computers used in or affecting interstate and foreign commerce. It shields them from trespassing, threats, damage, espionage, and from being corruptly used as instruments of fraud. It is not a comprehensive provision, instead it fills gaps in the protection afforded by other state and federal criminal laws. It is a work that over the last two decades, Congress has kneaded, reworked, recast, and amended to bolster the uncertain coverage of more general federal trespassing, threat, malicious mischief, fraud, and espionage statutes. This is a brief sketch of section 1030 and some of its federal statutory companions, including the amendments found in the Identity Theft Enforcement and Restitution Act of 2008, P.L. 110-326, 122. Stat. 3560 (2008) (H.R. 5938 (110th Congress))."
Library of Congress. Congressional Research Service
Doyle, Charles
2010-12-27
-
Cybercrime: A Sketch of 18 U.S.C. 1030 and Related Federal Criminal Laws [Updated February 25, 2008]
From the Summary: "The federal computer fraud and abuse statute, 18 U.S.C. 1030, outlaws conduct that victimizes computer systems. It is a computer security law. It protects computers in which there is a federal interest -- federal computers, bank computers, and computers used in interstate and foreign commerce. It shields them from trespassing, threats, damage, espionage, and from being corruptly used as instruments of fraud. It is not a comprehensive provision, instead it fills gaps in the protection afforded by other state and federal criminal laws. It is a work that over the last two decades, Congress has kneaded, reworked, recast, and amended to bolster the uncertain coverage of more general federal trespassing, threat, malicious mischief, fraud, and espionage statutes."
Library of Congress. Congressional Research Service
Doyle, Charles
2008-02-25
1