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The Law and Economics of Cybersecurity
This 2006 book explores the nature of the cybersecurity problem for nations and addresses possible solutions.
Mark F. Grady (Edited by), Francesco Parisi (Edited by)
9780521855273, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 28 November 2005
320 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 2.2 cm, 0.545 kg
Cybersecurity is a leading national problem for which the market may fail to produce a solution. The ultimate source of the problem is that computer owners lack adequate incentives to invest in security because they bear fully the costs of their security precautions but share the benefits with their network partners. In a world of positive transaction costs, individuals often select less than optimal security levels. The problem is compounded because the insecure networks extend far beyond the regulatory jurisdiction of any one nation or even coalition of nations. Originally published in 2006, this book brings together the views of leading law and economics scholars on the nature of the cybersecurity problem and possible solutions to it. Many of these solutions are market based, but they need some help, either from government or industry groups, or both. Indeed, the cybersecurity problem prefigures a host of twenty-first-century problems created by information technology and the globalization of markets.
Part I. Problems: 1. Private versus social incentives in cybersecurity, law and economics Bruce K. Kobayashi
2. A model for when disclosure helps security: what is different about computer and network security? Peter Swire
3. Peer production of survivable critical infrastructures Yochai Benkler
4. Cyber security: of heterogeneity and autarchy Randal C. Picker
5. Network responses to network threats: the evolution into private cybersecurity associations Amitai Aviram
6. The dark side of private ordering for cybersecurity Neal K. Katyal
7. Holding Internet Service Providers accountable Doug Lichtman and Eric P. Posner
8. Global cyberterrorism, jurisdiction, and international organization Joel T. Trachtman.
Subject Areas: IT & Communications law [LNQ], E-commerce law [LNCB2], International economics [KCL]