Domain and Duty of care: Difference between pages

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imported>Doug Williamson
(Create page. Source: Oxford Dictionary of Law.)
 
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1.  ''Information technology.''
1.  ''Law - negligence.''


A part of the internet owned or controlled by an organisation or individual, often having the same suffix in its IP address.
The legal duty of care is an obligation to take reasonable care to avoid causing damage to another party.


For example "treasurers.org".
The legal duty of care generally arises when it is reasonably foreseeable that an act or omission is likely to cause damage.




:<span style="color:#4B0082">'''''3D Secure's 3-domain structure'''''</span>
The range of other parties to whom the legal duty of care is owed depends on the relationship with them, and the circumstances.


:"3D Secure is a security protocol...


:The name 3D Secure derives from 3-domain structure.
2.  ''Ethics''.


:The authentication is a three-part process, with three parties involved:
A similar and broader ethical obligation to take reasonable care in relation to potential harm to a wider group of parties, including ones to whom there may not necessarily be a legal obligation.


:*The card issuer, such as Visa or MasterCard
:*The acquirer, and
:*The interoperability domain, such as the payment system.


:''3D Secure - the Treasurer's Wiki.''
== See also ==
 
* [[Delict]]
 
* [[Duty]]
2.  ''Ownership - control - influence - knowledge.''
* [[Ethics]]
 
* [[Fiduciary duty]]
Any identifiable area of ownership, control, knowledge, influence or responsibility.
* [[Negligence]]
 
* [[Negligent misrepresentation]]
 
* [[Party]]
:<span style="color:#4B0082">'''''Mutual understanding with bank supervisory domain
* [[Statutory duty]]
'''''</span>
* [[Tort]]
 
:"The existence of Spanish banking groups conducting financial activities in Latin American countries through local subsidiaries – and the possible inverse situation – entails the need for a better mutual understanding of both the banking system and the supervisory domain and for increasing the co-operation and exchange of information between the authorities entrusted with the prudential supervision in both countries... "
 
:''Spain - other international bilateral MoUs - the Treasurer's Wiki.''
 
 
==See also==
* [[Acquirer]]
* [[Authentication]]
* [[Bilateral]]
* [[Card scheme]]
* [[Information technology]]
* [[Interoperability]]
* [[IP address]]
* [[Issuer]]
* [[Market abuse]]
* [[Memorandum of understanding]]  (MoU)
* [[Payment system]]
* [[Protocol]]
* [[Prudential ]]
* [[Prudential regulation]]
* [[Public domain]]
* [[Security]]
* [[Spain]]
* [[Supervision]]
* [[3D Secure]]


[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:The_business_context]]
[[Category:The_business_context]]
[[Category:Identify_and_assess_risks]]
[[Category:Manage_risks]]
[[Category:Risk_frameworks]]
[[Category:Risk_reporting]]

Revision as of 04:17, 2 July 2021

1. Law - negligence.

The legal duty of care is an obligation to take reasonable care to avoid causing damage to another party.

The legal duty of care generally arises when it is reasonably foreseeable that an act or omission is likely to cause damage.


The range of other parties to whom the legal duty of care is owed depends on the relationship with them, and the circumstances.


2. Ethics.

A similar and broader ethical obligation to take reasonable care in relation to potential harm to a wider group of parties, including ones to whom there may not necessarily be a legal obligation.


See also