Archive for the ‘Law’ Category

The TRA & Public Participation in Policy Making

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

Even though many people dislike the policies made by the TRA (e.g. the upcoming ban of VPN) , I am one of the greatest fans of the TRA’s initiative to involve the public in the policy making process.

Even though Oman is still an absolute monarchy, the approach of the government over the years has been to slowly introduce venues for the public to participate in the policy making process to move Oman towards a more democratic system. Some might think that the development is way too slow, but it is there.

There are many examples of this starting from the establishment of the Shura Council, the passing of a Basic Statute of the State, and the development of role of the Oman Chamber of Commerce to allow the industry to lobby for changes in the law.

TRA has been brave enough to publish online draft regulations before they are passed so that the public is (a) aware of them before they are passed as law, and (b) able to comment on them and send feedback to the TRA. It is true that there is no guarantee that the TRA will accept any recommendations made by the public, but the fact that comments made by the public and the TRA’s responses to these comments are published online adds so much to the transparency of the process and helps us understand what the government is thinking.

According to my knowledge the TRA is the only government authority that does this, and I really applaud them for taking this initiative as it is in my opinion the greatest step made in involving the public in policy making process.

ضد علي الزويدي

Sunday, March 22nd, 2009

I apologize in advance to those subscribed to my blog and who do not understand Arabic. I am very frustrated by what I read on Arabic blogs and I owe the community a post in Arabic. This post is basically about the running case against a moderator of the Omania2.net. I have written about this here and Muscati wrote about it as well.

انا في شدة الاستغراب من المدونين العمانيين وتوقعهم بأن الانترنت هو عالم من الفوضى يحرم فرض الرقابة عليه. انه من الطبيعي ان يتحمل اصحاب المواقع مسؤولية ما ينشر فيها وهذه النظرية لم يتم اختراعها في دول العالم الثالث. في المملكة المتحدة لا تنحصر المسؤولية فقط على صاحب الموقع أو المشرف عليه، بل يمكن تحميل المسؤولية لشركة الاستضافة ومزود الخدمة حتى ولو لم يكونوا هم من قام بكتابة المقال المخالف.

معظم مواقع الأنترنت تدار لاهداف ربحية: سبلة عمان تنشر اعلانات جوجل وقد قامت في السابق بنشر اعلانات بنك مسقط مقابل مبلغ مادي، من الطبيعي ان يتحمل صاحب الموقع مسؤولية ما ينشر في موقعه، فهو يمتلك سيطرة مباشرة على كل موضوع أو رد ينشر، نظام المنتديات المستخدم من قبل المواقع العمانية يحتوي على العديد من خصائص المراقبة ومن الممكن لفريق المشرفين ان يتوثقوا من جميع الردود اذا كانت العملية منظمة، وذلك ما يحصل في الواقع، فمن الصعب على شخص ان ينشر ردا يحتوي على كلمات بذيئة من دون ان يتم حذف رده في خلال ساعات معدودة، إما من خلال اكتشاف المشرف لذلك الرد مباشرة أو من خلال بلاغ قام بارساله احد الأعضاء. الخلاصة أنه من الممكن للمشرفين مراقبة كل موضوع ورد في المنتدى، اذا لم يستطع عمل ذلك فعليه تعيين المزيد من المشرفين.

وجود قانون يحاسب اصحاب المواقع يحمي كل افراد المجتمع وليس فقط كبار المسؤولين في الشركات. تخيل انك فتاة تم التقاط صورتها من دون علمها وتم نشر تلك الصورة في احد المواقع. طبعا من الصعب معرفة الشخص الذي قام بنشر الصورة، وبدلا من ان يحذف المشرف الموضوع فور علمه به يقوم بالتعليق عليه طالبا من باقي الأعضاء “المساعدة” في معرفة شخصية الفتاة. هل هنالك اي شخص لا يعتقد أن صاحب الموقع يجب أن يتحمل المسؤولية في هذا الموقف؟

في رأيي قضية علي الزويدي مطابقة لتلك القصة، كان من الواضح ان الرد المنشور اتهم الوهيبي بالكثير من دون اية ادلة، الزويدي رأى الموضوع وبدلا من ان يحذف ما كان من الواضح اقوال قذف وتشهير، طلب من باقي الأعضاء المساعدة في ترجمة المقالة إلى العربية ليتمكن المزيد من الأعضاء من قراءة الموضوع. الزويدي ايجابياً وافق على نشر الموضوع بعد علمه بمحتواه وفي رأيي يجب ان يتحمل مسؤولية محتوى ذلك الموضوع.

أنا لا أعتقد أن القانون العماني خالي من العيوب، وأعتقد أن قانون الإتصالات سيكون أكثر عدالة إذا وفر لأصحاب المواقع طرقاً لتجنب المسؤولية، إما عن طريق فرض ارسال اخطار من المشتكي لصاحب الموقع لإزالة المحتوى المخالف، كما هو الحال في القانون الأمريكي في مجال مسئولية المخالفات المتعلقة بالحقوق الفكرية، أو من خلال تمكين أصحاب المواقع بإخلاء مسؤليتهم عن طريق اتخاذتهم لخطوات معقولة لتحقق من عدم وجود اية مخالفات – كما هو الحال في قانون التشهير البريطاني.

ولكن في جميع الأحوال من الطبيعي والمفروض ان يتحمل أصحاب المواقع مسؤولية ما ينشر في مواقعهم لحمايتنا نحن كأفراد، فلا يوجد قانون في العالم يسمح لحرية التعبير بأن تتجاوز حقوق وحريات باقي افراد المجتمع.

What Are Bilateral Investment Treaties?

Monday, February 23rd, 2009

bilateral-investment-treaties
(Photo Credits: anjan58)

Oman had signed bilateral investment treaties (BITs) with many countries from all around the world, the latest was ratified today with the Netherlands.

Not a lot of people know what these are. In fact, many governments sign them without knowing what they mean, some think of their signature is just part of a celebratory event that takes place when a minister from a foreign state visits the country and just think of them as a meaningless MOU that has no legal implications.

A Bilateral Investment Treaty is a treaty by which a government promises another government to protect the investment of national of the second country in the first country in return of reciprocal treatment. The text of these treaties is usually quite short and it’s usually less than ten pages long, but the main principles of it are national treatment, free transfer of funds, full protection and security, and protection against expropriation.

While many of these principles might already be existent in national laws of countries (for example, Oman provides protection for foreign investment in its Foreign Capital Investment Law 104/94), the protection of BITs differs in that it could exceed the national level of protection, it could even exceed the protection granted for local investors (e.g. in the case of ‘full protection and security’ which is not usually granted by countries for any investor local or foreign), and the most significant impact of it is that it gives a foreign investor the right to take an action against the host government for a breach of the treaty in International Arbitration. This right will exist regardless of whether there was any contractual arrangement between that government and the investor, and it will surely not be available for local investors. 

Such right is risky for governments, as they can be inadvertently in breach, for example, of expropriation indirectly, and then could be sued for millions of dollars at an international arbitration center (horror stories happened to the governments of Pakistan and Turkey).

There are no known records of any investor taking an action against the Omani government, however, last year, a Omani investor successfully was awarded damages of USD $24 million against Yemen by relying on the Bilateral Investment Treaty between Oman and Yemen.

BIT are scary agreements and there is no proof at all that they contribute to the attraction of foreign investment to a country. Many free trade agreements (such as Oman-US FTA) also include a chapter on investment with very similar provisions.

In Oman, the Ministry of National Economy coordinates the negotiation process of bilateral investment treaties with other countries. The Ministry of Legal is responsible for reviewing them prior to signature to ensure their compliance with national laws.

US-Oman Free Trade Agreement Finally Comse Into Force

Tuesday, December 30th, 2008

USA Flag
(Photo Credits: ukslim)

Reports are coming out that the US-Oman Free Trade Agreement (signed in 2006) is finally coming into foce on the 1st of January 2009. It took almost two years for the congress to approve the agreement and for Oman to ensure that its legal system was updated to ensure that Oman perform its obligations under the agreement.

The purpose of the agreement is to remove all trade barries between the two countries and to grant natioanl treatment for traders from each country in all sectors. The agreement also includes a chapter on trade that has similar provisions to a billateral investment treaty.

Not sure how quickly it will take us to notice the impact of the FTA, but I suspect that participation of American companies in public tenders will be instant.

MUST READ: FTA summary here.

You can read the full text here.

myITLawyer.com

Sunday, November 16th, 2008

I started a new blog recently that focuses on IT Law and it’s called myITLawyer. The subject of this blog is not mainstream (IT Law) and I am actually still not sure about the level of detail which I should go for, I will be posting on weekly basis about the topics I go through during my course , these will be international in nature (I am studying European, American, and Japanese IP), but I will also be posting about Omani IT law as well.

If anybody has any comments or suggestions please feel free to comment!

(PS. Check out my new article at the Times of Oman).

New Website Alert: Oman Legal Zone

Saturday, August 2nd, 2008

I recently bumped into the latest new Omani website on the Internet: Oman Legal Zone. OLZ is a website founded by Rozalin Al Bulushi (her real name, we are not related and we never met). Rozalin is a legal advisor at the Telecommunication Regulation Authority (TRA) and has very recently launched this website with the goal of providing the public with affordable legal service online at affordable prices. According to its founders, the launch of the OLZ was not actually influenced by the recent passing of the Eletronic Transactions Law, but the general trend in Oman of moving towards e-commerce made this seem like the right time to launch such a website.

Services currently offered at OLZ include legal advice services, contract drafting services, IP registration services, and a free find-a-lawyer service. OLZ will also provide in the future online training services and legal book order services. The book delivery service should be up within 2 to 3 months and its rate will vary depending on the delivery method.

All the currently available services of OLZ may be requested by filling an online form that lets you upload all the documents and materials relevant to your case or contract and submitting your request. An OLZ staff will presumably respond to your request with the details on how to move forward. Currently, the website does not provide any actual rates nor does it actually specify the payment methods, however, I have contacted OLZ and I was informed that OLZ accepts Paypal and direct bank deposit. It is worth noting that you cannot use Paypal to send money online from a Omani bank yet, so the only real method for making payment to OLZ is through direct bank deposit if you are in Oman.

I think that OLZ is a great idea, we do not have any Omani legal resource in the English language in Oman and having an online portal for receiving legal requests is cool. However, I feel that OLZ has several major flaws that will prevent it from being a major success:

  1. OLZ appears anonymous and untrustworthy: Even though you now know the person behind it, it is not actually written anywhere on the website, we do not know who is on the ‘claimed’ team of OLZ. The legal business is heavely based on trust and you cannot trust somebody you do not know. You need to dig down and read the fine print of the terms of conditions of the website to learn that OLZ is NOT a law firm nor does it seem to be registerd in any shape or form. Who is going to dare submit his confidential information whether regarding a legal advice, a contract, or even a description of his intellectual property to an anonymous website?

  2. OLZ is not registered: Beside the trust issue mentioned above, to my understanding of the law, providing legal services such as legal advice and contract drafting requires a license as stipulated by the Advocacy Law. I contacted OLZ and asked them the following:
    BC: The terms of the website state Oman Legal Zone is not a law firm. However, the services offered by the website are the same as those mentioned in Article 2 of the Advocacy Law (108/96) and offering these services can arguably be said to require an Advocacy License in accordance with that law. Article 6 of the same law also prohibits an employee of any government authority from performing any of the advocacy services while they are in service. Any comments on this?

    OLZ’s responsded with the following:

    OLZ: Our website is run by a team. There are two lawyers in the team. Thus, we have no problem of conflict with that Act. Furthermore, what we are trying to do in Oman Legal Zone is to assist individuals to advice them in the minor legal issues and we draft simple contracts to them. However, if they need a registered lawyer or we think that they need one we directly forward their inquires to one after inform the customer and in this case we do not charge him/ her anything. In addition, all that mentioned in our Terms of Services “right”.

    In my opinion, the fact that the service is provided by more than one person is not relevant to the issue of the license requirement. Legal advice and contract drafting are both explicitly mentioned in the Law as activities which can only be carried a licensed lawyer. You can read the law yourself here [PDF - Arabic], and its amendments can be found here, here, here, and here.

  3. OLZ is not making any significant use of technology: the current OLZ website does not provide any functionality for registering as a client with a unique log-in name and a private request status portal. In fact, the website provides a mere mail form that is not even delivered using any secure transfer protocol or encryption.
  4. Unfortunately, I also discovered that the privacy statement of OLZ has been copied off Yahoo!’s privacy policy. OLZ privacy policy talks about services offered by Yahoo and even links to pages on Yahoo about deleting user accounts, cookies, web beacons, and advertisements. OLZ also has a section in which copied articles from local and regional newspapers are pasted. This use obviously exceeds fair-use and consititutes a copyright violation. Attributing the source is not a defence under copyright.

OLZ surely can improve on many of the things mentioned above. The trust issue can be overcome by being more open about what OLZ is and providing profile pages for the team members behind OLZ. OLZ must also make sure that they own service is not illegal. Once these things are established OLZ can further improve its website by using functionality that ehances their offering and provides clients with the security they need to transmit their information on the web.

The Omani web is obviously still not mature enough, but I think that we are going through an interesting phase as we see more content websites popping up all the time, especially websites that serve a specific purpose and have a focused goal such as OLZ. I still wish OLZ the best of luck and hope that they clean up their act and succeed.

Going for an LLM @ Southampton

Tuesday, June 17th, 2008


Today I sent the offer confirmation letter to the University of Southampton in the UK to do an LLM in IT and Commerce. The Ministry of Legal Affairs is sponsoring me to go do a Masters degree this upcoming academic year.

I have recently been assigned to some projects relating to IT law at MOLA, so my Director General was very supportive of the specialization choice I made and the Minister agreed.

I had offers from Cardiff University and Essex University as well, but I decided to go to Southampton because the course structure and their module selection appealed to me to the most. I’m basically going to study Internet Law, Internet Policy, Intellectual Property, and maybe Internal Trade or International Economic Integration.

I originally wanted to apply to a university in the states, but the deadlines for American universities is way earlier than those in the UK. So yeah, it is THEIR LOSS.

Anyway, Southampton is the place from which the Titanic departed for its fated trip, and it is the home of Craig David! (Too much pop culture?)

Eletronic Transactions Law 101 : Website Owners and Bloggers

Saturday, June 14th, 2008


The Omani Electronic Transactions Law was issued by Royal Decree 69/2008, its basically recognizes electronic transactions as legitimate transactions, sets the ground rules for dealing electronically, regulates digital encryptions, recognizes and regulates digital signature and authentication services, regulates improper usage of digitally collected personal details, and establishes punishments for digital crimes.

The whole Arabic text of the law can be downloaded from here (warning PDF link). There is no official translation of the law until the time of this post, but our law is very much identical to a number of American legislations relating to the same subject matter (for example: the Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act (PDF version found here)) this happened because of American pressure on Oman to provide the minimum legal framework required for the entry of the Free Trade Agreement into force.

I would like to try and write several posts talking about the different issues governed by the Electronic Transactions Law. My first post is going to be about the impact of this law on website owners, as I am one of them.

I would like to make a disclaimer at this point that I am writing this post in my personal capacity. I am a civil servant employed by the Ministry of Legal Affairs, but this post is not be treated as any official opinion or commentary. I would also like advise you to seek the help of a proper lawyer if you face any problems with the law and not take the contents of this post as the decisive stance of the law as interpretation of it may differ from one person to the other.

Electronic Transactions Law 101: Website Owners and Bloggers

The law defines the term “Network Agent” to which it applies and the coverage of this term is is not limited to websites that we traditionally think of as online shops, but it covers any website that provides a service for sending, receiving, adopting, or storing an electronic transaction or performs any services relating to these transactions. It is worth noting at this moment at the term ‘Electronic Transaction” as any procedure or contract concluded or performed completely or partially using electronic messages.

This definition does not make any reference to receiving or facilities payment and that means that your mere involvement in providing a medium for merely communicating and offer and its acceptance makes you a “Network Agent” to which the law applies:

Example:
Ali owns a forum in which people can sell and buy products from each other. Anybody can register to his forum. He does not make any profit from it, but people can advertise their goods and other members can offer to buy them. When an offer and acceptance are met online, the seller and buyer agree to meet up somewhere offline to exchange the goods. Ali in this example offers a service for performing an electronic transaction. The fact that he does not make money from it is irrelevant. The fact that the money was not transferred on his website and that the contract was ‘performed’ offline does not matter, the ETL applies to his website.

It can also be easily argued that a website is a “Network Agent” to which the law applies is as follows:

  1. Putting advertisement on a website can be an act related to an electronic transaction and that by itself is enough to make the law applicable to your website.
  2. Providing a medium for communicating an offer or acceptance (eg. a private message system rather than a public post) can be considered as a electronic transaction service.

The wide definition of the term “Network Agent” means that the law will apply to a massive number of websites, and to add to that, there are obligations on all websites that collect personal information about their users without necessarily having any business aspect relate to them.

It is also worth noting that the term “Electronic Transaction” covers any ‘procedure’ or ‘contract’, it is unknown what the term ‘procedure’ means and but it can expand this definition even further. It is unknown if the authorities realize how wide the definition of Network Agent is or whether this definition was in fact intentional, but it seems to include forums, and websites and blogs in which advertisement is served at least.

So what does it mean to have your website recognized as a Network Agent under the ETL?

1. First of all, under Article 6, the law makes it an obligation for a network agent to provide under his own expenses all technical tools required to make his website accessible for the purposes of national security. The Ministry of Finance will specify any connectivity requirements to which network agents must be compliant with. Though the law makes this as a clear obligation, I do not think that it will mean anything in practice other than allowing the authorities to gain full access to your website for the purposes of national security.

2. Article 14 is one of the most interesting articles in the ETL as it covers the liability of a network agent of information created on his servers by others. The ETL states that the network agent can avoid the liability for creating, publishing, or distributing this infringing content if he satisfies both of the following conditions:

  1. He does not know that the status of this information constitutes a criminal or a civil liability.
  2. He instantly removes and stops access to this information once he knows about it.

Article 14 also states that it does NOT create an obligation on the network agent to monitor electronic records when his is limited to the provision of a service for accessing those records.

This is an interesting article as it rebuts the general belief that the website owner is not liable for content written by other people on his website and makes him liable for if he knows about it does not take any action regarding it. It is also worth noting that the information or infringing action does not have to relate to an electronic transaction itself.

Khalid has a blog in which he puts advertisements, he allows people to comment on his blog. Khalid wrote a review about a computer program. Ali replies to Khalid’s blog post and links to a cracked link of the program. Khalid knows about Ali’s comment but does not do anything about it. Khalid is liable for publishing copyright infringing content even though he did not put it himself because he is a network agent. He may face criminal and civil actions under the Copyright Law.

The law is not clear about the definition of ‘knowledge’ in this context, is ‘actual’ knowledge required, or can the network agent be expected to know where it is reasonable for him to be so. For example, can someone reasonable not know about a comment on his blog. Should he be assumed to know about it whether or not he actually knew about it?

3. The third relevant section of the ETL is Chapter 7 on the protection of personal data. Article 45 requires any person (not just a network agent) who controls personal information in the practice of his involvement in electronic transactions to inform the person to whom he has any information on prior to ‘using’ that information. The article requires the information holder to inform the user about who is responsible for using his information, the nature of the data to be held, and the purpose of using it.

The best example of this is a forum database, those databases have a massive amount of personal and non-personal information of users, e.g. name, location, date of birth, and obviously emails. So if you are going to use any of this information the user must be informed of everything related to this prior to your usage.

Mohammed has a forum in which he serves advertising. His database holds thousands of emails. Mohammed must tell his users that he is going to send them period advertisement emails before he sends any of these emails.

In the example above, Mohammed can inform his users about this practice right before they register by adding it to the terms and conditions of the website, but he must ensure that it mentions who is going has control and access to these emails.

Article 48 later prohibits using these personal details to damage the users or violate their rights or freedoms.

Article 49 requires any person holding personal information about users to take care while transferring these information abroad and he must take into consideration matters such as the nature of the information, the source of the info, the purpose for the transfer, the destination country, and the laws available to protect information in the destination country.

I find this last article above very strange, the practical implication of it is not clear, but I think that following it can release the liability of a person for the loss of data he has transmitted to a third party.

However, in practice, it is extremely rare circumstances will the data be stored in Oman itself because we do not have local hosting services, so everybody will be transferring personal details abroad.

—-

This concludes my very first post on Oman Electronic Transactions Law. I have only talked about article which I thought directly affected website owners and bloggers in general. I will try to post about the other topics in the near future.

UNCTAD and ITAP Investment Workshop in Jordan

Wednesday, October 10th, 2007

I will be attending a 10-day training programme in Jordan right after Eid. The event is organised by the investment section of the Islamic Development Bank organisation and the United Nations’ UNCTAD. The program will cover international investment agreements and dispute settlement issues related to them (mostly arbitration).

One of our duties at MOLA is to review investment agreements that government goes into, and one of my colleagues at work is part of the negotiating committee that is responsible for bilateral investment agreements with other countries, so this should be very interesting. I am required to submit a 2-3 page brief on the BIT format Oman uses, which I found, but did not manage to examine properly yet. I am supposed to submit this within five days, I will try to do it tomorrow.

The program is going to be pretty extensive, 9am to 6pm daily with one day off through-out, so I am not sure how much sightseeing I will be able to do, but it is always nice to have a break from work every now and then.

Will keep up you updated on how this goes.

Scholarship Opportunity at MOLA

Sunday, September 9th, 2007

The Ministry of Legal Affairs is giving out ten scholarships to study Law in the UK for Omanis. The requirements are ‘some’ Bs in your secondary school certificate, especially English, an IELTS score of 6 or a TOEFL score of 500. The deadline for filling the application form is the 16th of September (Sunday next week)!

Bilingual school graduates are much more likely to be accepted, one’s who did not do the IELTS or TOEFL can still just apply.

It is important to note that candidates must be BILINGUAL, you have to SPEAK and WRITE Arabic fluently as well. A test and an interview will be conducted to test your language.

Application forms are to be collected from the Ministry’s HQ in Al Khuwair. Call 2448 9802 for info on how to get there, you may call the Human Resources guy (Mohammed Ali Al Farsi) in the Ministry at the extension 237.

Good luck!


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