President Clinton cemented a key building block of Internet commerce Friday, signing legislation that makes contracts signed by computer equal to those sealed in pen and ink.
Published:
1 July 2000 y., Saturday
``Online contracts will now have the same legal force as equivalent paper contracts,'' Clinton said in a signing ceremony near the place where Americas two bedrock state papers - The Declaration of Independence and the Constitution - were signed with the ink-on-paper names of the nation's founders.
The president symbolically linked the quill pens used to sign those charter documents with the wallet-size, chip embedded plastic card he used to place the name ``Bill Clinton'' on a computer screen under the text of the ``Electronics Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act.''
Because the new law applies to commerce, not bills approved by Congress, Clinton first signed the paper version of the legislation the old-fashioned way, with an ink-filled pen. Clinton said he believes that electronic signatures and Internet commerce are important new tools of the global and national economies.
The measure takes effect Oct. 1. As of March 1, 2001, companies can begin the electronic retention of legal records such as mortgages and financial securities.
The new law provides that no contract, signature or record shall be denied legally binding status just because it is in electronic form. The contract must still be in a form capable of bring retained and accurately reproduced.
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
Tipped off by American officials, Italian police shut down two rings of hackers who attacked Web sites belonging to the U.S. Army and NASA
more »
Yokohama Mayor Hiroshi Nakada decided Friday to allow residents of the city to choose whether their personal data can be registered in a national resident registry network to be launched Monday by the central government
more »
An Israeli startup takes on Moore's law--and Texas Instruments
more »
Wal-Mart, the most mass-market retailer imaginable, is committing an outrageous form of computing heresy: On its Web site, it's selling Windows-compatible personal computers without Windows
more »
Businesses in the US and UK agree that spam is a problem, but according to MessageLabs many users cannot reach a consensus on its definition
more »
search.lt presents newest links
more »
FORMER FSB OFFICER TESTIFIES ABOUT 1999 APARTMENT-BUILDING BOMBINGS...
more »
Microsoft on Wednesday acknowledged that its .Net plan has been slow to catch on and laid out an agenda to move the software strategy ahead
more »
Police Show Up Only to Find Infected WebTVs.
more »
Filters fail to block 'pro-terrorist' messages
more »