[Federal Register Volume 64, Number 7 (Tuesday, January 12, 1999)]
[Notices]
[Pages 1852-1853]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 99-680]
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DEPARTMENT OF STATE
[Public Notice No. 2957]
Advisory Committee on Private International Law (ACPIL), Study
Group on Electronic Commerce; Meeting Notice
The Study Group on Electronic Commerce of the Advisory Committee on
Private International Law (ACPIL) will hold its next meeting from 1:00
to 5:00 p.m. on Wednesday, January 27 in Washington, DC. The purpose of
the meeting will be to review recent proposals for international rules
on electronic signature and authentication systems to be considered in
February at the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law
(UNCITRAL).
UNCITRAL has had before it since May 1997 proposals for rules on
certain aspects of electronic signature and authentication systems.
Consensus has been difficult to reach internationally, and the next
meeting of the Commission is expected to determine whether that is
feasible at this point in the development of electronic systems
applications as well as underlying legal and technical rules or
standards. A recent document prepared by the Secretariat on the basis
of consultations with States, UN Doc.A/CN.9/WG.IV/WP.80, December 15,
1998, which contains proposed rules will be considered. Background
documents and the status of this project are set out in UN Doc.A/CN.9/
WG.IV/WP.78, December 2, 1998.
The proposed rules cover definitions of electronic and enhanced
electronic signatures, signature holder and information certifier;
compliance with requirements for signatures and originals, the
obligations of signature holders and information certifiers, reliance,
and other matters. At issue is whether they are a workable approach for
international rules, which can at the
[[Page 1853]]
same time bridge the gap between countries who have sought rules
favoring certain existing technologies and those seeking a minimalist
approach until both market and new technology developments become more
clear, and thus the effect on commerce and business applications more
predictable.
The status of ongoing projects at various international bodies,
both intergovernmental and private sector, as well as federal and state
domestic law developments in the United States will be reviewed as
appropriate. These may include recent developments at the OECD, APEC,
the ICC and others, and the status of the proposed Uniform Electronic
Transactions Act (UETA) and Uniform Commercial Code Article 2B, in view
of the close connection between them in an era of globalization of
commerce, information, and borderless connections through data
networks. US proposals for a multilateral convention or bilateral
agreements incorporating relevant provisions of the 1996 UNCITRAL Model
Law will also be reviewed.
Recent UN documents that will be on the table at the Study Group
meeting are available from the Office of Legal Adviser at the contact
numbers indicated below, or at the following UN web page addresses:
http://www.un.or.at/uncitral/english/sessions /wg__ec/wp-80.htm,and wp-
78.htm. For additional background documents on electronic commerce,
including the 1996 UNCITRAL Model Law on Electronic Commerce, as well
as general information on other international law unification projects
at the Commission, such as international project finance, secured
interest financing and commercial arbitration, access the UNCITRAL web
page at www.un.or.at/uncitral/index.html.
The Advisory Committee meeting will take place at the Department of
Commerce at 14th and Pennsylvania Ave., NW in the Secretary's
Conference Room 5855; attendees should use the main entrance on 14th
Street. The meeting is open to the public up to the capacity of the
meeting room; persons who cannot attend are welcome to comment,
including any recommendations for possible U.S. positions on these
matters. For further information, please contact Mark Bohannon, Chief
Counsel for Technology at the Department of Commerce, (202) 482-1984,
fax 482-0253, or Harold Burman, Advisory Committee Executive Director,
at (202) 776-8421, fax 776-8482. Written comments or requests to be
added to the ACPIL mailing list on electronic commerce can be sent to
the Office of Legal Adviser (L/PIL), 2430 ``E'' Street, NW, Suite 355
South Building, Washington, DC 20037-2800.
Harold S. Burman,
Advisory Committee, Executive Director.
[FR Doc. 99-680 Filed 1-11-99; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4710-08-U