The book opens novel discussions on e-residency, cryptocurrencies, scams, smart contracts, 3D-pringing, software agents, digital evidence and e-governance in the intersection of law, legal policies and modern technologies.
The reader benefits from the cutting-edge analyses that offers ideas and solutions to some of the most pressing issues caused by eTechnologies. This collection is a useful tool for law and IT practitioners and an inspiring source for interdisciplinary research. Besides being a practical guideline, the contribution also reflects theoretical dimension of the future perspectives as new technologies are not there to change common values but to accommodate them.