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38 U. Tol. L. Rev. 193 (2006-2007)
Online Mediation: Where We Have Been, Where We Are Now, and Where We Should Be

handle is hein.journals/utol38 and id is 207 raw text is: ONLINE MEDIATION: WHERE WE HAVE BEEN, WHERE
WE ARE NOW, AND WHERE WE SHOULD BE
Sarah Rudolph Cole * and Kristen M Blankley**
I. INTRODUCTION
T HE increased use of online mediation to resolve disputes arising in
commercial transactions is challenging our traditional notions about both
litigation and alternative dispute resolution (ADR).  Historically, most
commercial transactions occurred face-to-face between people who generally
shared a relatively well-defined set of background norms.  Typically, the
methods for handling these disputes were marked by two characteristics:
(1) face-to-face meetings (whether arbitration, mediation, or in the courtroom),
and (2) explicit or implicit reliance on the shared norms as a tool to inform the
dispute resolution process.
The Internet challenges these assumptions in two ways. First, the market has
become much less local. This characteristic is already present in today's
commercial transactions because of the increased use of mail, faxing, and
telephone. For example, the Internet has opened up the ability of buyers in
Singapore to talk to and transact with sellers in Des Moines or. vice versa. When
disputes arise in such contexts, however, sitting down together and working out a
mutually beneficial solution is difficult. Because of the distances involved, the
costs associated with filing a legal action in a foreign country, and the difficulty
in establishing a jurisdiction to hear the case or enforce a judgment, an online,
informal dispute resolution mechanism may be the only way to resolve this new
set of commercial disputes.
At its most basic level, online dispute resolution (ODR) is any method by
which parties attempt to resolve disputes online. These parties may decide to
send each other e-mail messages and negotiate from a distance, or they may
enlist the help of an intermediary or mediator to facilitate the negotiations. For
some parties, however, the use of the ODR process alone is not enough. These
parties enhance ODR with a virtual presence, such as teleconferencing or
videoconferencing to achieve a setting similar to a face-to-face chat. Additional
investigation is necessary to determine whether these substitutes work, to what
* Squire, Sanders & Dempsey Designated Professor of Law, Moritz College of Law, The
Ohio State University. B.A., University of Puget Sound; J.D., University of Chicago Law School.
I would like to thank Sabrina Riggs for her excellent research assistance.
** Associate, Squire, Sanders & Dempsey. B.A., Hiram College; J.D., Moritz College of
Law, The Ohio State University.

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