| 1 | Bytes Into Computer Law | 1 |
| Pt. I | Legal Aspects of Electronic Data Interchange | |
| 2 | Three Types of EDI Contracts | 29 |
| 3 | The Need to Standardise in an EDI Environment: Balancing the Legal Conditions and Implications | 43 |
| Pt. II | Issues in Commercial Law | |
| 4 | Liability for Fraud and Mistake in Electronic Transfers of Funds | 63 |
| 5 | Shipping Documents and EDI | 83 |
| Pt. III | Issues Relating to Intellectual Property | |
| 6 | Software Protection Under Eurorean Community Law | 99 |
| 7 | Protecting Computer Databases Under the United States Copyright Laws: Implication of the FEIST Decision | 113 |
| 8 | Electronic Data Interchange: The Perspectives of Private International Law and Data Protection | 128 |
| Pt. IV | Evidential Matters | |
| 9 | A Forensic Methodology for Countering Computer Crime | 145 |
| 10 | Computers, Hearsay and the English Law of Evidence | 159 |
| 11 | Evidential Issues in an Electronic Data Interchange Context According to Norwegian Law | 175 |
| Pt. V | Artificial Intelligence Applications to Law | |
| 12 | The Use of an Expert System Shell to Present the Mental Health Act to Social Workers | 197 |
| 13 | The Maintanance of Legal Knowledge Based Systems | 209 |
| 14 | The Problem With Law in Books and Law in Computers: The Oral Nature of Law | 225 |
| 15 | Competence and Legal Liability in the Development of Software for Safety Related Applications | 237 |
| Index | 251 |