Who should create the laws in Cyberspace? and Who should enforce the laws in Cyberspace?

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In Cyberspace there are not many laws that hold true throughout, in all countries, or regions. As most laws are created to protect the people, and their interests in the country or region they live. There is currently no Geneva Convention for the internet, although many are hoping to create some type of universal laws that are international. So currently the laws are made by the law makers in their respective countries, this process is however a very long one so I feel it will be years until there is any semblance of universal or global laws if ever. Until then we will be responsible to create laws for the people in our own country, and have to yield to and respect other people’s laws to have any sort of community on the Net.
There are however many organizations that do attempt to bring some sort of universal order to the Internet, but by standards rather than laws. There is the W3c (World Wide Web Consortium) which creates standards for code, and programming languages, along with the IETF (Internet Engineer Task Force) which produces standards for protocols. Another major organization is the ICANN (Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers) which develops standards for the DNS (Domain Name System). These are not laws per say, but I guess they are the closest thing to it on a Global level, as these are universal throughout the World Wide Web.

One of the most difficult tasks is how to enforce law on the internet. Some people feel that ISP’s (Internet Service Providers) should be responsible to prevent Cybercrime, or that the government should put additional resources to these tasks. I know from my personal experience there are many crimes that go uncharged, due to a lack of resources. I currently hold a position in a company that does a large amount of business on the Net, and we receive many fraudulent orders. Currently there is not a very good system in place to catch the people committing the crimes, as jurisdiction is a large issue. In the last 10 years there has been a development by the US government to attempt to circumvent this with the IC3 (Internet Crime Complaint Center), although I feel their attempts are feeble. So with that I feel that the responsibility lies ultimately with the community that uses the Net to enforce the rules that govern it.