Digital rights law introduce Art. 141.1, which enshrines the basic definition of the concept of “digital law”, which is a legal equivalent of the term “token”, to the Civil Code 1.
The Civil Rights Digital Library (CRDL) promotes an enhanced understanding of the Civil Rights Movement through a digital video archive, a civil rights portal, and instructional materials. Access thousands of newspaper and magazine articles, facts, and primary sources from reliable sources.
Obtaining access to the internet is a digital right. The application of digital rights attempts to extend pre-existing, conventional human rights principles to the digital sphere. The United Nations Human Rights Council passed a resolution deeming that the protection of human rights online is just as important as offline.
Activities that break the law or are unethical include causing damage to other people’s identity, stealing digital property, hacking into others information, downloading illegal media, plagiarizing, creating malware, or sending spam with malicious purposes. Similar to digital law, digital citizens have the right to privacy and free speech.