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Australian Society of Archivists
Electronic Records Special Interest Group

Managing Websites Seminar: Gearing up for the e-commerce era

Legal and recordkeeping issues associated with management of websites

Barbara Reed, Recordkeeping Systems Pty Ltd


1. Introduction: what are websites?

To discuss websites in relation to legal and recordkeeping issues, we first have to agree what a website is. Indeed, as we always find when these issues come to light, a website is a more complex thing than we would have it at a superficial glance. At a superficial glance a website is that thing we access using the URL (uniform resource locator) in a web browser such as Internet Explorer or Netscape. But:

  • is the website a simple page, or
  • is it the whole of the connected sets of pages linked through the top level of increasingly complex networks of documents, or
  • does it include all the links associated with the web pages, or
  • does it include the transactional data bases which support interaction on the website, or
  • is a web page an increasingly transitory thing, being constructed ‘on-the-fly’ from data located elsewhere but put together to fit the profile of user and information that an individual is fitted to when hitting the URL?

For the purposes of this discussion, I’ve adopted the definition by McClure and Spehe(1) :

‘a website is a set of Uniform Resource Locators that fall under a single administrative control’.

However, the introductory musing on what a website may be does introduce us to the concept that this form is evolving and is not a static or passive thing, either in how it is being thought about, nor how we view or interact with it.

Jay Alden(2) has characterised three major stages of web development.

Stage One, Experimentation has the following characteristics:

  • mimics the current organisation;
  • driven by personality and organisational processes; little influence by users;
  • islands of adoption that lack standardisation;
  • no mission critical applications;
  • little impact on organisational performance.

Stage Two, Institutionalisation:

  • diverges from organisational structure;
  • still driven by organisation processes but users have input to functionality;
  • standardisation and interactivity;
  • support for mission critical applications;
  • impact on organisational performance is more tactical than strategic.

Stage Three, Ubiquity:

  • little relationship to organisational structures;
  • users have great control over interface and functionality;
  • high degree of user interactivity;
  • primary means for performing mission critical applications;
  • organisational performance is highly dependent on web functionality.

Other taxonomies for websites have been proposed. Another useful set is to consider websites as being ‘billboard, informational or transactional’.

Whichever taxonomy is adopted, it is clear that websites are not standard forms, but things which are doing different things for organisations or individuals at different stages of their development. We need to take care that we don’t loose sight of what function a website is performing, as this is, as always in recordkeeping, a key determinant in working out how to manage them.

2. Preliminary recordkeeping concerns

Most of the implementations of web sites are somewhere between the second and third stages of the taxonomies described above.

For recordkeepers, the first two stages are really pretty boring. It is here that we see websites as essentially passive sites. They present information that is basically static. They can be seen as equivalent to public relations or marketing forms, acting as a more-or-less fixed public front. Technically, every time a user accesses a website it is a transaction and records could be captured, but such transactions are generally not very interesting to recordkeepers. The closest analogy for such static webpages is the publishing process which in itself has recordkeeping issues associated with it, issues which I will return to at the end of this paper.

It is when we get to the ubiquitous or transactional stage of websites that recordkeepers really need to be able to engage with the technology - both with the technology as an agent creating records and the technology as an interface between agents creating records. Conducting business on the web is enabled through interactive websites – such interactive websites might create interfaces with business application systems to create and deliver views of information to customers/clients and provide mechanisms for customers/clients to interact with organisations. Once this commences, we have business transactions happening. Such transactions, as we all know, are the primary concern of recordkeepers and we need to be extremely active in establishing rules for working out what records of the transactions we need to keep and/or enabling technological methods for capturing records of those transactions. Unfortunately, most of our traditional recordkeeping tools will not help us greatly in this area at the moment.

3. Speed of uptake and business drivers

In thinking around these issues it is very important to grasp that the way organisations are employing websites is changing dramatically and very quickly. One of the major drivers towards such change is the thrust towards electronic service delivery on line. At a federal government level this is being actively pushed by the government, with delivery promises such those found in the 1997 Investing For Growth(3) document which establishes the goal of the conduct of all government payments electronically by 2000. Governments, at all levels nationally and internationally, are actively promoting the use of the web as a major part of the e-commerce infrastructure.

In terms of the technology uptake, a recent report from NOIE(4) suggests that, in Australia:

  • 22% of households have were online in May 1998;
  • 48% of small businesses and 82% of medium businesses were connected to the internet by February 1999; and
  • 12% of small businesses and 18% of medium businesses were using e-commerce to sell their products and services. Projections of these figures lead the government to anticipate an increase in these proportions by 2000 to 30% of small business and 38% of medium business.

It is not difficult to see why e-commerce or e-business is attracting attention: the costs of delivering services which use machines instead of employees is proven to be significantly reduced in many business areas. Within the banking environment, for example, the costs of delivering customer transactions via a bank branch is estimated to be $1.08 but using internet banking, the same transaction is estimated to cost $0.13(5). Most businesses do not have the same level of client interaction as banks, and despite the general hype that abounds, it is business to business transactions (B2B) that are anticipated to be the area of major commercial uptake.

In pushing for an active adoption of e-commerce frameworks the importance of web technology and protocols is paramount. Such technology architectures are very different from the old EDI (electronic document interchange) environments which were essentially dedicated networks established between closed communities of known partners, where specific contractual relationships were agreed, specific software for particular uses developed, and sets of rules and protocols agreed. In contrast, the web is an open standards environment using protocols of TCP/IP, routing and communications protocols, html, dynamic html and increasingly XML to conduct interactive transactions. Using the protocols of this environment doesn’t depend on pre-established agreements, software and rules. The environment is open to all and anyone can join in.

4. Legal/regulatory Framework

The present Federal government, in common with most other national governments, has been working out the type of regulatory frameworks that need to apply in order to foster the growth of electronic commerce. This government and many others world wide have been reluctant to regulate. This is in part a pragmatic response, as early regulators tended to regulate for specific technologies, for example in the area of digital signatures in some US legislatures. Obviously with the speed of movement of technology, such approaches are not viable over time.

In Australia, the Federal government has taken the lead in establishing frameworks for electronic commerce. This has been in four major areas:

  • Trade Practices and consumer confidence;
  • Privacy (now a light touch, not a light handed approach) ;
  • Electronic Transactions, and
  • Authentication.

Each one of these areas is administered by a separate government agency, which has led to a plethora of agencies concerned with electronic commerce issues.

4.1 Trade Practices and consumer confidence

Trade Practices and consumer confidence issues are being managed by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission. The Trade Practices Act, 1974 is relevant for electronic transactions. Part 5 contains a range of provisions protecting consumers and corporations as consumers, including s.52 which deals with misleading and deceptive conduct and prohibits conduct which is misleading or deceptive, or which is likely to mislead or deceive. Sellers are required to tell the truth or to refrain from giving an untruthful impression, including disclosure of relevant information. S 53 prohibits flase claims about sponsorship, approval, performance chanracteristics, accessories, uses of benefits of goods and services.

These restrictions will apply to electronic transactions and electronically supplied information as well as to physical goods and services.

A Policy Framework for Consumer Protection in Electronic Commerce(6) was released for comment in May 1999. Comments are expected to be in at the end of November.

4.2 Privacy

Privacy has been a vexed issue for the present government which resolved not to extend the privacy net beyond government. However, they seem to have been forced to move by the understanding that over 56% of Australians are concerned about the invasion of privacy issues enabled by the new information technologies. This initial approach has now been somewhat modified by the adoption of the National Principles for the Fair Handling of Personal Information based on the development of industry and business codes of practice that are consistent with the standards laid down in the existing Privacy legislation and which are approved by the Privacy Commissioner. There are many vocal critics of the regulatory environment relating to privacy, and recently, the stricter requirements on privacy set by the European Union, particularly in the area of electronic commerce, are influencing government policy directions. New legislation to formally extend this coverage beyond business self regulation is expected to be introduced by the end of 1999(7).

The approach to privacy regulation in Australia has been the subject of controversy. The NSW Privacy Commissioner, for instance, argues that such approaches are not in the interests of business and that the way the provisions have been framed will leave individuals unclear about what rules apply over which types of transactions - even from a single source. Significant social concerns about data warehousing, matching and exploitation exist.(8)

4.3 Electronic Transactions

The Electronic Transactions Bill(9) is a recordkeeping bill and is the government's response to the Expert Group constituted to look at the legal framework for Ecommerce(10). It was presented to parliament in June 1999. It is based on the United Nation's Model Law on Electronic Commerce and will form the basis of national legislation to be adopted by each of the states and territories. This bill is based on the principles of:

Technology neutrality and
Functional equivalence.

‘“Electronic communication” is defined as:

‘a communication of information by means of guided and/or unguided electromagnetic energy. The term “communication” should also be interpreted broadly. Information that is recorded, stored or retained in an electronic form but is not transmitted immediately after being created is intended to fall within the scope of an “electronic communication”’.

Transaction is also broadly defined, to include transactions of a non-commercial nature. (The term “transaction” is defined in clause 5.) It is intended to:

‘be read in its broadest sense of doing something, whether it be conducting or negotiating a business deal or simply providing information or a statement. It should not be read narrowly to confine it to contractual or commercial relationships. Nor is it limited to the actual transmission of the information.’

Of further interest to recordkeepers are the following clauses:
Clause 9 Writing
Clause 10 Signature
Clause 11 Production of document
Clause 12 Retention
Clause 14 Time and place of dispatch and receipt of electronic communications
Clause 15 Attribution of electronic communications.

The Bill identifies and defines:

  • Useability
  • Accessibility
  • Reliability
  • Integrity
  • Authenticity.

4.4 Authentication

The fourth major area identified above is that of authentication. This area is one which is still being worked through after some abortive starts. A new body has been recently established to advise on policy issues: the National Electronic Authentication Council.

At present the authentication frameworks focus on the identity of the sender. The issue of digital signatures and trusted third parties as authenticators of identity are being worked through. Issues of authenticating transactions, or authenticating authority to do particular business are not yet well articulated or addressed.

These broader issues of authentication concern recordkeepers who are responsible for the maintanence of reliable evidence of transaction. A further issue is that of encryption and the robustness of the mechanisms that are available to ensure that transactions are trustworthy and untampered with. For recordkeepers, encryption is also an issue concerning when and how records are captured.

The development of frameworks and standards for authentication have been outsourced to Standards Australia, who are specifically responsible for developing a framework of technical standards and codes of business practice.

5. Recordkeeping issues

Web sites and web pages can be regarded as just another media. What is really important is what is being done and, as recordkeepers, this is how we should approach the management of all formats.

Questions such as ‘are web pages records’ are slightly bizarre. Unfortunately things get muddy when web pages are looked at out of context. If the focus of the question is on the artifact - the webpage – they are being regarded as passive information resources, and are perhaps the purview of the librarianship discipline. As websites evolve into more active sites conducting business, this artefact view ceases to be relevant. The electronic transaction is the record and the record relates to the business being transacted. The synergy between record and business becomes much stronger.

At early stages of web development it might be possible to be a bit dismissive and say that websites are variants of a paper form and that the authoritative record is to be found somewhere else, perhaps in paper form. But this comfortable assumption ceases to be true very quickly. Even for passive documents (ie those with little interactivity connected) the premise is flawed, as the degree of reliance placed upon the electronic version distributed via the intranet or internet forces us to regard the electronic version as the locus of authority.

Passive sites will need to comply with the legislative frameworks outlined above.

There have been a number of responses for recordkeeping relating to websites: the most typical is to pretend that this stuff is not a threat, an approach that is very limited in its application.

A second approach is to regard the record of transactions relating to websites as located within the publishing process. This approach is to capture the record as a part of a publishing process – the process guiding the placement of material onto the web. While this is valid up to a point, it still regards websites as different and separate from the conduct of business. A third approach is to catch the record where the business responsibility lies - but is the form of the record as it is being processed in business the same form as it appears on the web?

The linking of web based documents with other transactional records from the point where the business is generated is obviously much more consistent with approaches endorsed by recordkeeping frameworks. However, the problems here are that the business units and the publishing process need to coalesce and coordinate in ways that are often not well worked through.

Obviously web pages need to be linked to electronic recordkeeping systems. While some of our recordkeeping packages can capture these formats, it is not the format that is the problem it is the capture of appropriate context.

Once businesses move to integrating web sites with business systems, creating active websites, the problems become much more complex. These web sites generate records ‘on the fly’, often tailored in presentation views to the customer profile of the person interacting. In this environment we need to maintain much more complex records than merely those of 'publishing’ a particular web page. At present the answers seem to be in maintaining logs of web transactions, with more detailed documentation of the web pages update process, with some advocating snapshots of whole web sites at strategic times. I think that this response is inappropriate, for all the reasons that database records and audit logs are inappropriate as a strategy for capturing records of evidence.

The newer transactions need different strategies - ones that are not yet around in recordkeeping systems. We need to have trigger events - possibly taken from event logs, which then populate specified fields and lock the transaction into context at the time it is taking place. To do this we need robust metadata specifications and recordkeeping functionality built into the transaction based things that are happening on the web. We need to build records from the things happening via web sites, in ways that we can just begin to imagine. Unfortunately the software vendors for recordkeeping software can't even begin to see those glimmers of imagination. There is a short window of great opportunity here and we have many of the structural planks in place: conceptual thinking; emerging metadata sets(11), understanding of some of the distributed network architectures and tools for grabbing metadata from various sources. What we need to do is to get some viable operational examples of this stuff working in practice. This will be our next challenge.

6. Conclusion

While these issues are being worked through, as recordkeepers we should be:

  • advocating integration with business processes;
  • Understanding that web transactions are business transactions and fall under the same set of recordkeeping business and policy rules;
  • use of the electronic record systems that are around;
  • advocacy with web managers;
  • promulgation of business understanding of risks and liabilities in this medium;
  • keeping up to date with the fast moving, light handed, regulatory framework; and
  • advocacy of recordkeeping issues with policy bodies such as NOIE and NEAC.

Recordkeeping References

McClure and Sprehe, Guidelines for Electronic Records Management on State and Federal Agency Websites, February 1998, http://www.istweb.syr.edu/~mcclure/

Information Management Forum, Internet/Intranet Working Group, An Approach to Managing Internet and Intranet Information for Long Term Access and Accountability, September 1999 http://www.imforumgi.gc.ca/forum_e.html

Information Management Forum, Internet/Intranet Working Group, Managing Internet and Intranet Information for Long Term Access and Accountability – Implementation Guide, September 1999 http://www.imforumgi.gc.ca/forum_e.html

John McDonald, 'Managing Internet and Intranet information for long term access and accountability' presentation slides for talk to Records Management Institute, 10 November 1999, which was based on the presentation done for the Monash University/Recordkeeping Systems seminar, ‘Doing Business Electronically’ http://www.recordkeeping.com.au

© Copyright Barbara Reed 2000


Footnotes

(1) McClure and Spehe, Guidelines for Electronic Records Management on State and Federal Agency Websites, Febuary 1998, http://istweb.syr.edu/~mcclure/

(2) Jay Alden, ‘Strategic Impact from Websites’ Presentation, http://istweb.syr.edu/~mcclure/web-eval-ho/index.htm

(3) Investing for Growth, 1997 http://www.dist.gov.au/growth/html/infoage.html

(4) National Office for the Information Economy, ‘E-Australia.com.au’ Australia’s e-commerce report card’, November 1999 http://www.noie.gov.au

(5) Booz, Allan Hamilton, at http://www.bah.com/press/bankstudy.html (July 1999)

(6) http://www.treasury.gov.au/

(7) The Privacy Amendment (Private Sector) Bill was released for public comment on 14 December 1999 (with comments due by 17 January 2000!).

(8) For an example of the criticisms being made, see Roger Clarke, Submission to the Commonwealth Attorney General Re: ‘A privacy scheme for the private sector’: Release of Key Provisions’ of 14 December 1999, http://www.anu.edu.au/people/Roger.Clarke/DV/PAPSSub0001.html (January 2000)

(9) Available from Commonwealth Attorney General’s home page: http://www.law.gov.au/publications/ecommerce/

(10) Electronic Commerce: Building the Legal Framework, March 1998, Report of the Electronic Commerce Expert Group to the Attorney General, http://www.law.gov.au/aghome/advisory/eceg/ecegreport.html

(11) The most obvious cross sectoral standard is emerging from the Monash University collaborative research project which has produced the Australian Recordkeeping Metadata Schema, see http://www.sims.monash.edu.au/rcrg/, and jurisdiction specific sets which have been influenced by this set, including the National Archives of Australia: Recordkeeping Metadata Standard for Commonwealth Agencies, May 1999, available from the NAA website at http://www.naa.gov.au/recordkeeping/control/rkms/summary.htm and the emerging NSW State Records Metadata Set.

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Last updated 28 July 2000.