This issues paper is concerned with ensuring the integrity of Australia’s e-court processes through the development of information protection standards and protocols. The integrity of the court process is important to the national interest because businesses and citizens depend on the certainty of court decisions, naturally assuming that their information and privacy is protected. This paper is a catalyst for future research leading to the creation of an information protection framework, including policies and standards enabling courts to define the use of courtroom technologies, thus ensuring that their design and application is grounded within established information protection principles. Without substantiation of the quality of technological structures and processes used by e-courts, the system of certainty upon which the courts and law are based has the potential to become inherently uncertain.
CITATION STYLE
May, L., & Burdon, M. (2006). Information protection management structures in australian e-courts. Journal of Theoretical and Applied Electronic Commerce Research, 1(3), 58–67. https://doi.org/10.3390/jtaer1030022
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