NORTH CAROLINA GENERAL STATUTES
SECTION 14-453
As amended by Session Laws 1999-212, Senate Bill No. 288
(Approved by Governor June 25, 1999; effective December 1, 1999)
§ 14-453. Definitions
As used in this Article, unless the context
clearly requires otherwise, the following terms have the meanings
specified:
(1) "Access" means to instruct,
communicate with, cause input, cause output, cause data
processing, or otherwise make use of any resources of a computer,
computer system, or computer network.
(1a) "Authorization" means having
the consent or permission of the owner, or of the person licensed
or authorized by the owner to grant consent or permission to
access a computer, computer system, or computer network in a
manner not exceeding the consent or permission.
(1b) "Commercial electronic
mail" means messages sent and received electronically
consisting of commercial advertising material, the principal
purpose of which is to promote the for-profit sale or lease of
goods or services to the recipient.
(2) "Computer" means an internally
programmed, automatic device that performs data processing or
telephone switching.
(3) "Computer network" means the
interconnection of communication systems with a computer through
remote terminals, or a complex consisting of two or more
interconnected computers or telephone switching equipment.
(4) "Computer program" means an
ordered set of data that are coded instructions or statements that
when executed by a computer cause the computer to process data.
(4a) Computer services" means
computer time or services, including data processing services,
Internet services, electronic mail services, electronic message
services, or information or data stored in connection with any of
these services.
(5) "Computer software" means a
set of computer programs, procedures and associated documentation
concerned with the operation of a computer, computer system, or
computer network.
(6) "Computer system" means at
least one computer together with a set of related, connected, or
unconnected peripheral devices.
(6a) "Data" means a representation
of information, facts, knowledge, concepts, or instructions
prepared in a formalized or other manner and intended for use in a
computer, computer system, or computer network. Data may be
embodied in any form including, but not limited to, computer
printouts, magnetic storage media, and punch cards, or may be
stored internally in the memory of a computer.
(6b) "Electronic mail service
provider" means any person who (i) is an intermediary in
sending or receiving electronic mail and (ii) provides to end
users of electronic mail services the ability to send or receive
electronic mail.
(7) "Financial instrument"
includes any check, draft, money order, certificate of deposit,
letter of credit, bill of exchange, credit card or marketable
security, or any electronic data processing representation
thereof.
(8) "Property" includes financial
instruments, information, including electronically processed or
produced data, and computer software and computer programs in
either machine or human readable form, and any other tangible or
intangible item of value.
(8a) "Resource" includes
peripheral devices, computer software, computer programs, and
data, and means to be a part of a computer, computer system, or
computer network.
(9) "Services" includes computer
time, data processing and storage functions.
(10) "Unsolicited" means not
addressed to a recipient with whom the initiator has an existing
business or personal relationship and not sent at the request of,
or with the express consent of, the recipient.
NORTH CAROLINA GENERAL STATUTES
SECTION 14-458
Added by Session Laws 1999-212, Senate Bill No. 288
(Approved by Governor June 25, 1999; effective December 1, 1999)
§ 14-458. Computer trespass;
penalty
(a) It shall be unlawful for any person to
use a computer or computer network without authority and with the
intent to do any of the following:
(1) Temporarily or permanently remove, halt,
or otherwise disable any computer data, computer programs, or
computer software from a computer or computer network.
(2) Cause a computer to malfunction,
regardless of how long the malfunction persists.
(3) Alter or erase any computer data,
computer programs, or computer software.
(4) Cause physical injury to the property of
another.
(5) Make or cause to be made an unauthorized
copy, in any form, including, but not limited to, any printed or
electronic form of computer data, computer programs, or computer
software residing in, communicated by, or produced by a computer
or computer network.
(6) Falsely identify with the intent to
deceive or defraud the recipient or forge commercial electronic
mail transmission information or other routing information in any
manner in connection with the transmission of unsolicited bulk
commercial electronic mail through or into the computer network of
an electronic mail service provider or its subscribers.
For purposes of this subsection, a person is
"without authority" when (i) the person has no right or
permission of the owner to use a computer, or the person uses a
computer in a manner exceeding the right or permission, or (ii)
the person uses a computer or computer network, or the computer
services of an electronic mail service provider to transmit
unsolicited bulk commercial electronic mail in contravention of
the authority granted by or in violation of the policies set by
the electronic mail service provider.
(b) Any person who violates this section
shall be guilty of computer trespass, which offense shall be
punishable as a Class 3 misdemeanor. If there is damage to the
property of another and the damage is valued at less than two
thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) caused by the person's act
in violation of this section, the offense shall be punished as a
Class 1 misdemeanor. If there is damage to the property of another
valued at two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) or more
caused by the person's act in violation of this section, the
offense shall be punished as a Class I felony.
(c) Any person whose property or person is
injured by reason of a violation of this section may sue for and
recover any damages sustained and the costs of the suit pursuant
to G.S. 1-539.2A.
NORTH CAROLINA GENERAL STATUTES
SECTION 1-539.2A
Added by Session Laws 1999-212, Senate Bill No. 288
(Approved by Governor June 25, 1999; effective December 1, 1999)
As amended by Session Laws 1999-456, House Bill No. 162
(Approved by Governor August 13, 1999; effective December 1, 1999)
§ 1-539.2A. Damages for computer
trespass
(a) Any person whose property or person is
injured by reason of a violation of G.S. 14-458 may sue for and
recover any damages sustained and the costs of the suit. Without
limiting the general of the term, "damages" shall
include loss of profits. If the injury arises from the
transmission of unsolicited bulk commercial electronic mail, the
injured person, other than an electronic mail service provider,
may also recover attorneys' fees and may elect, in lieu of actual
damages, to recover the lesser of ten dollars ($10.00) for each
and every unsolicited bulk commercial electronic mail message
transmitted in violation of this section, or twenty-five thousand
dollars ($25,000) per day. The injured person shall not have a
cause of action against the electronic mail service provider which
merely transmits the unsolicited bulk commercial electronic mail
over its computer network. If the injury arises from the
transmission of unsolicited bulk commercial electronic mail, an
injured electronic mail service provider may also recover
attorneys' fees and costs and may elect, in lieu of actual
damages, to recover the greater of ten dollars ($10.00) for each
and every unsolicited bulk commercial electronic mail message
transmitted in violation of this section, or twenty-five thousand
dollars ($25,000) per day.
(b) A civil action under this section shall
be commenced before expiration of the time period prescribed in
G.S. 1-54. In actions alleging injury arising from the
transmission of unsolicited bulk commercial electronic mail,
personal jurisdiction may be exercised pursuant to G.S. 1-75.4(13).
NORTH CAROLINA GENERAL STATUTES
SECTION 1-75.4
As amended by Session Laws 1999-212, Senate Bill No. 288
(Approved by Governor June 25, 1999; effective December 1, 1999)
§ 1-75.4. Personal jurisdiction,
grounds for generally
A court of this State having jurisdiction of
the subject matter has jurisdiction over a person served in an
action pursuant to Rule 4(j), Rule 4(j1), or Rule 4(j3) of the
Rules of Civil Procedure under any of the following circumstances:
(1) Local Presence or Status. -- In any
action, whether the claim arises within or without this State, in
which a claim is asserted against a party who when service of
process is made upon such party:
a. Is a natural person present within this
State; or
b. Is a natural person domiciled within this
State; or
c. Is a domestic corporation; or
d. Is engaged in substantial activity within
this State, whether such activity is wholly interstate,
intrastate, or otherwise.
(2) Special Jurisdiction Statutes. -- In any
action which may be brought under statutes of this State that
specifically confer grounds for personal jurisdiction.
(3) Local Act or Omission. -- In any action
claiming injury to person or property or for wrongful death within
or without this State arising out of an act or omission within
this State by the defendant.
(4) Local Injury; Foreign Act. -- In any
action for wrongful death occurring within this State or in any
action claiming injury to person or property within this State
arising out of an act or omission outside this State by the
defendant, provided in addition that at or about the time of the
injury either:
a. Solicitation or services activities were
carried on within this State by or on behalf of the defendant; or
b. Products, materials or thing processed,
serviced or manufactured by the defendant were used or consumed,
within this State in the ordinary course of trade.; or
c. Unsolicited bulk commercial electronic
mail was sent into or within this State by the defendant using a
computer, computer network, or the computer services of an
electronic mail service provider in contravention of the authority
granted by or in violation of the policies set by the electronic
mail service provider. Transmission of commercial electronic mail
from an organization to its members shall not be deemed to be
unsolicited bulk commercial electronic mail.
(5) Local Services, Goods or Contracts. --
In any action which:
a. Arises out of a promise, made anywhere to
the plaintiff or to some third party for the plaintiff's benefit,
by the defendant to perform services within this State or to pay
for services to be performed in this State by the plaintiff; or
b. Arises out of services actually performed
for the plaintiff by the defendant within this State, or services
actually performed for the defendant by the plaintiff within this
State if such performance within this State was authorized or
ratified by the defendant; or
c. Arises out of a promise, made anywhere to
the plaintiff or to some third party for the plaintiff's benefit,
by the defendant to deliver or receive within this State, or to
ship from this State goods, documents of title, or other things of
value; or
d. Relates to goods, documents of title, or
other things of value shipped from this State by the plaintiff to
the defendant on his order or direction; or
e. Relates to goods, documents of title, or
other things of value actually received by the plaintiff in this
State from the defendant through a carrier without regard to where
delivery to the carrier occurred.
(6) Local Property. -- In any action which
arises out of:
a. A promise, made anywhere to the plaintiff
or to some third party for the plaintiff's benefit, by the
defendant to create in either party an interest in, or protect,
acquire, dispose of, use, rent, own, control or possess by either
party real property situated in this State; or
b. A claim to recover for any benefit
derived by the defendant through the use, ownership, control or
possession by the defendant of tangible property situated within
this State either at the time of the first use, ownership, control
or possession or at the time the action is commenced; or
c. A claim that the defendant return,
restore, or account to the plaintiff for any asset or thing of
value which was within this State at the time the defendant
acquired possession or control over it.
(7) Deficiency Judgment on Local Foreclosure
or Resale. -- In any action to recover a deficiency judgment upon
an obligation secured by a mortgage, deed of trust, conditional
sale, or other security instrument executed by the defendant or
his predecessor to whose obligation the defendant has succeeded
and the deficiency is claimed either:
a. In an action in this State to foreclose
such security instrument upon real property, tangible personal
property, or an intangible represented by an indispensable
instrument, situated in this State; or
b. Following sale of real or tangible
personal property or an intangible represented by an indispensable
instrument in this State under a power of sale contained in any
security instrument.
(8) Director or Officer of a Domestic
Corporation. -- In any action against a defendant who is or was an
officer or director of a domestic corporation where the action
arises out of the defendant's conduct as such officer or director
or out of the activities of such corporation while the defendant
held office as a director or officer.
(9) Taxes or Assessments. -- In any action
for the collection of taxes or assessments levied, assessed or
otherwise imposed by a taxing authority of this State after the
date of ratification of this act.
(10) Insurance or Insurers. -- In any action
which arises out of a contract of insurance as defined in G.S.
58-1-10 made anywhere between the plaintiff or some third party
and the defendant and in addition either:
a. The plaintiff was a resident of this
State when the event occurred out of which the claim arose; or
b. The event out of which the claim arose
occurred within this State, regardless of where the plaintiff
resided.
(11) Personal Representative. -- In any
action against a personal representative to enforce a claim
against the deceased person represented, whether or not the action
was commenced during the lifetime of the deceased, where one or
more of the grounds stated in subdivisions (2) to (10) of this
section would have furnished a basis for jurisdiction over the
deceased had he been living.
(12) Marital Relationship. -- In any action
under Chapter 50 that arises out of the marital relationship
within this State, notwithstanding subsequent departure from the
State, if the other party to the marital relationship continues to
reside in this State.