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Vagueness Challenges to the Computer Fraud and Abuse ActOrin S. KerrGeorge Washington University - Law School December 22, 2009 Minnesota Law Review, 2010 GWU Legal Studies Research Paper No. 482 GWU Law School Public Law Research Paper No. 482 Abstract: This Article argues that the void for vagueness doctrine requires courts to adopt narrow interpretations of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. On its face, the CFAA has become extraordinarily broad. Recent amendments indicate that Congress has largely abandoned the job of identifying what conduct involving computers should or should not be a federal crime. Congress has broadened the statute so far that the courts must now narrowly construe the statute to save its constitutionality. This Article demonstrates how courts should narrowly construe the statute under the void for vagueness doctrine by focusing on two recent criminal prosecutions: United States v. Drew, which considered whether Terms of Service violations trigger CFAA liability, and United States v. Nosal, which asked whether it violates the CFAA for employees to access their employers’ computers in ways contrary to their employers’ interests. These two prosecutions show the critical role of vagueness doctrine in interpreting the CFAA, pointing to a future of judicial narrowing of the statute.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 26 Keywords: computer hacking, CFAA, Computer Fraud and Abuse Act JEL Classification: k14 Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: December 23, 2009Suggested CitationContact Information
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