Convention on Cybercrime
0 sources
Convention on Cybercrime
Summary
Convention on Cybercrime is a Council of Europe treaty[1]. It draws 412 Wikipedia views per month (council_of_europe_treaty category, ranking #3 of 20).[2]
Key Facts
- Convention on Cybercrime's instance of is recorded as Council of Europe treaty[3].
- Convention on Cybercrime's instance of is recorded as treaty[4].
- The location of Convention on Cybercrime was Budapest[5].
- Convention on Cybercrime's language of work or name is recorded as English[6].
- Convention on Cybercrime's language of work or name is recorded as French[7].
- July 1, 2004 marks the founding of Convention on Cybercrime[8].
- Convention on Cybercrime occurred on November 8, 2001[9].
- Convention on Cybercrime's signatory is recorded as South Africa[10].
- Convention on Cybercrime's signatory is recorded as Canada[11].
- Convention on Cybercrime's signatory is recorded as Japan[12].
- Convention on Cybercrime's signatory is recorded as Philippines[13].
- Convention on Cybercrime's signatory is recorded as United States[14].
- Convention on Cybercrime's signatory is recorded as Australia[15].
- Convention on Cybercrime's signatory is recorded as Dominican Republic[16].
- Convention on Cybercrime's signatory is recorded as Israel[17].
- Convention on Cybercrime's signatory is recorded as Mauritius[18].
- Convention on Cybercrime's signatory is recorded as Panama[19].
- Convention on Cybercrime's signatory is recorded as Sri Lanka[20].
- Convention on Cybercrime's signatory is recorded as Colombia[21].
- Convention on Cybercrime's depositary is recorded as Secretary General of the Council of Europe[22].
- Convention on Cybercrime's amended by is recorded as Additional Protocol to the Convention on Cybercrime[23].
- Convention on Cybercrime's number of subscribers is recorded as {'amount': '+65'}[24].
Why It Matters
Convention on Cybercrime draws 412 Wikipedia views per month (council_of_europe_treaty category, ranking #3 of 20).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 14 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[25] It is known by 11 alternative names across languages and contexts.[26]