It’s time to roundup the bills related to computer technology that the Hawai‘i legislature is considering in its 2014 regular session.  Click here for a chart summarizing the proposed legislation.  Here are the highlights:

Social Media and Internet Account Passwords:  Several bills to prohibit improper requests for access to personal social media accounts of employees and students were introduced in the 2013 session.  None of the them passed.  This year, HB2415 renews the effort to outlaw improper social media password requests.

Internet Sales Tax:  HB1651 would require online companies with arrangements with Hawaii merchants for referral of business  to collect use taxes on sales made in Hawaii.  This bill would affect online retailers like Amazon, who allows local merchants to sell their products through Amazon Marketplace.

Restrictive Covenants:  In an effort to encourage the development of technology business in Hawai‘i, a state with a relatively small geographic area, two bills (HB2617 and SB3126) would prohibit technology businesses from requiring employees to enter into noncompete agreements and restrictive covenants.  “Technology business” is defined as “a trade or business that relies on software development, information technology, or both.”

Cybersquatting: SB2958 would put the burden on a cybersquatter to prove that it did not register a domain name in bad faith or with intent to use it in an unlawful manner, provided that the person claiming cybersquatting can demonstrate the potential of immediate and irreparable harm through misuse of the domain name.

Cybersecurity Council: SB2474 would establish the Hawai‘i cybersecurity, economic, education, anfrastructure security council.

Mobile Devices: Three bills (HB1509HB1896, and SB2729) would make it a State offense to use a mobile electronic device while operating a motor vehicle.  Certain counties already have similar laws.

3D Printing: In response to the rising availability of 3D printers, HB1802 would make it a crime to create, possess, sell, trade, or give another person a firearm made with digital manufacturing technology.

Computer crimes: A series of bills criminalizes various kinds of computer activity, including unauthorized access to a computer or network and damage to a “critical infrastructure computer” (HB1640); theft of a computer (HB1644);  or personal electronic device for storing or retrieving personal information (HB2080); and revenge porn (SB2319).

Cyberbullying. Employer social media password requests. Crowdfunding. Those were some of the hot tech topics that the Hawai‘i State Legislature grappled with this session.  (See my post on Internet related legislative proposals in the 2013 session).    The bills addressing those topics didn’t pass, however.  In fact, none of the bills listed in my chart of Internet Related Legislative Proposals survived.  The closest to passing, perhaps, were two bills prohibiting employer requests to employees to disclose their personal social media account information, but the bills got stuck in committee.

That’s not to say that the 2013 session was completely devoid of tech.  I’ve prepared a chart of all the bills related to electronic, digital, and information technology that the Hawai‘i State Legislature passed this session.  (Many thanks to the Legislative Reference Bureau for providing the summaries that are incorporated into the chart).  Governor Neil Abercrombie has already signed some of the bills into law.  Others are pending a decision from the Governor.  To summarize, the legislature this year addressed:

  • Adoption of the Uniform Electronic Legal Material Act
  • Portable electronics insurance
  • Clarification of relationship between Uniform Commercial Code Article 4A and Electronic Fund Transfer Act
  • Licensing requirements for telemedicine practitioners employed by the U.S. Department of Defense
  • Duties of the State Chief Information Officer
  • Electronic posting of reports of Department of Health inspection of state licensed care facilities
  • Availability of State open data
  • Approval of broadband related permits
  • Electronic prescriptions
  • Tax credits for film and digital media industry
  • Ban on use of mobile electronic devices while operating a motor vehicle

For summaries of all the bills that passed this session, read the full LRB report.  For even more information visit the Legislature’s website for the full text of bills, committee reports, and testimony.  I’ll update the chart after the Governor’s veto deadline has passed, so check back in a while.

 

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Now that the 2013 legislative session in Hawai‘i is in full swing, let’s take a look at what new measures are in the pipeline to regulate Internet activity.  A chart of relevant information about each bill is available here.  Here’s a summary of the Internet-related proposals working their way through the legislature.

Social Media and Internet Account Passwords

A set of bills (SB207 and HB713) proposes to join other states in banning employers from asking employees or job applicants to disclose the passwords to their personal social media accounts.  Another set of proposals (HB1104 and HB1023) would extend the ban to educational institutions and their students or prospective students.

Privacy Policies

Two bills (HB39 and SB729) would make it a legal requirement for operators of a commercial website or online service to post a privacy policy on their website.

Cyberbullying

Three bills (HB1226, SB525, and HB397) would require the board of education to adopt various policies and programs to combat cyberbullying in public and charter schools.

Teacher/Student Interactions

Apparently responding to incidents in which teachers and students conducted inappropriate relationships online, HB678 would allow a teacher in a public or charter school to engage in electronic communication with a student (including cell phone calls) only on Department of Education networks and systems.

Identity Theft

SB325 would require businesses to implement a comprehensive, written policy and procedure to prevent identity theft and train all employees in implementation of the same.

Cybersecurity

HB462 would establish a statewide cybersecurity council to identify and assess critical computer infrastructure, identify cybersecurity “best practices,” recommend incentives for voluntary adoption of such best practices, evaluate the efficacy of such practices, and report annually to the legislature.

We’ll be tracking these bills, reporting on their status periodically, and posting revisions to the chart.  Stay tuned!