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2002 No. 318

ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATIONS

The Electronic Signatures Regulations 2002

  Made 13th February 2002 
  Laid before Parliament 14th February 2002 
  Coming into force 8th March 2002 

The Secretary of State, being designated[1] for the purpose of section 2(2) of the European Communities Act 1972[2] in relation to electronic signatures, in exercise of the powers conferred on her by the said section 2(2), hereby makes the following Regulations:

Citation and commencement
     1. These Regulations may be cited as the Electronic Signatures Regulations 2002 and shall come into force on 8th March 2002.

Interpretation
    
2. In these Regulations - 

Supervision of certification-service-providers
     3.  - (1) It shall be the duty of the Secretary of State to keep under review the carrying on of activities of certification-service-providers who are established in the United Kingdom and who issue qualified certificates to the public and the persons by whom they are carried on with a view to her becoming aware of the identity of those persons and the circumstances relating to the carrying on of those activities.

    (2) It shall also be the duty of the Secretary of State to establish and maintain a register of certification-service-providers who are established in the United Kingdom and who issue qualified certificates to the public.

    (3) The Secretary of State shall record in the register the names and addresses of those certification-service-providers of whom she is aware who are established in the United Kingdom and who issue qualified certificates to the public.

    (4) The Secretary of State shall publish the register in such manner as she considers appropriate.

    (5) The Secretary of State shall have regard to evidence becoming available to her with respect to any course of conduct of a certification-service-provider who is established in the United Kingdom and who issues qualified certificates to the public and which appears to her to be conduct detrimental to the interests of those persons who use or rely on those certificates with a view to making any of this evidence as she considers expedient available to the public in such manner as she considers appropriate.

Liability of certification-service-providers
    
4.  - (1) Where - 

    (2) For the purposes of the certification-service-provider's liability under paragraph (1) above there shall be a duty of care between that certification-service-provider and the person referred to in paragraph (1)(b) above.

    (3) Where - 

    (4) For the purposes of the certification-service-provider's liability under paragraph (3) above there shall be a duty of care between that certification-service-provider and the person referred to in paragraph (3)(b) above.

Data Protection
    
5.  - (1) A certification-service-provider who issues a certificate to the public and to whom this paragraph applies in accordance with paragraph (6) below - 

    (2) The obligation to comply with paragraph (1) above shall be a duty owed to any data subject who may be affected by a contravention of paragraph (1).

    (3) Where a duty is owed by virtue of paragraph (2) above to any data subject, any breach of that duty which causes that data subject to sustain loss or damage shall be actionable by him.

    (4) Compliance with paragraph (1) above shall also be enforceable by civil proceedings brought by the Crown for an injunction or for an interdict or for any other appropriate relief or remedy.

    (5) Paragraph (4) above shall not prejudice any right that a data subject may have by virtue of paragraph (3) above to bring civil proceedings for the contravention or apprehended contravention of paragraph (1) above.

    (6) Paragraph (1) above applies to a certification-service-provider in respect of personal data only if the certification-service-provider is established in the United Kingdom and the personal data are processed in the context of that establishment.

    (7) For the purposes of paragraph (6) above, each of the following is to be treated as established in the United Kingdom - 

    (8) In this regulation - 


Douglas Alexander
Minister of E-Commerce and Competitiveness in Europe, Department of Trade and Industry

13th February 2002



SCHEDULE 1
(Regulation 2)


(Annex I to the Directive)


REQUIREMENTS FOR QUALIFIED CERTIFICATES

Qualified certificates must contain:



SCHEDULE 2
(Regulation 2)


(Annex II to the Directive)


REQUIREMENTS FOR CERTIFICATION-SERVICE-PROVIDERS ISSUING QUALIFIED CERTIFICATES

Certification-service-providers must:



EXPLANATORY NOTE

(This note is not part of the Regulations)


These Regulations implement Directive 1999/93/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council on a Community framework for electronic signatures[
5]. The provisions of this Directive which are implemented relate to the supervision of certification-service-providers, their liability in certain circumstances and data protection requirements concerning them; provisions in the Directive relating to the admissibility of electronic signatures as evidence in legal proceedings were implemented by section 7 of the Electronic Communications Act 2000 (2000 c. 7).

Regulation 3 imposes a duty on the Secretary of State to keep under review the carrying on of activities of certain certification-service-providers, to establish, maintain and publish a register of these certification-service-providers and to have regard to any evidence of their conduct which is detrimental to users of qualified certificates with a view to publication of any of this evidence.

Regulation 4 imposes liability on certification-service-providers in certain circumstances even though there is no proof of negligence unless the certification-service-provider in question proves he was not negligent.

Regulation 5 imposes a duty on certification-service-providers in certain circumstances to comply with specified data protection requirements. Breach of that duty is actionable by a data subject who suffers loss and compliance with the requirements can also be enforced by civil proceedings by the Crown.

A transposition note setting out how the main elements of the Directive are transposed into law has been placed in the libraries of both Houses of Parliament. Copies are also available from Information Security Policy Group, Communications and Information Industries Directorate, Department of Trade and Industry, Bay 226, 151 Buckingham Palace Road, London SW1W 9SS.


Notes:

[1] S.I. 2000/738.back

[2] 1972 c. 68.back

[3] OJ No. L13, 19.1.00, p. 12.back

[4] 1998 c. 29.back

[5] OJ No. L13, 19.1.00, p. 12.back



ISBN 0 11 039401 1


  Prepared 4 March 2002


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