Grenada

AI behavior law: bot and agent disclosure, crawler and training-data rules, automated-agent transactions, and algorithmic decision-making.

0
Instruments
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Enacted
0
Proposed / in discussion
low
Confidence

Summary

Grenada has an Electronic Crimes Act 2013 (Act No. 23 of 2013, amended Act No. 10 of 2014, in force 2016) criminalising unauthorised access to electronic systems. A Data Protection Act was assented on 9 May 2023 (Act No. 1 of 2023, gazetted 10 May 2023) but is pending a ministerial commencement order and is not yet in force as of the research date. Copyright law follows the UK-heritage fair-dealing model with no TDM exception and no sui generis database right. Public-page crawling is not expressly targeted; the unauthorized-access offence requires absence of authorization. No scraping-specific case law exists. The absence of an in-force data protection act means personal-data protections rest on the Electronic Crimes Act's privacy provisions and common law only.

Automated-access legality

Carried forward from the crawler-law index. Governs whether automated clients may access public websites in this jurisdiction.

DimensionValue
Authorization testunsettled
Public-page carve-outunsettled
Terms-of-service browsewrap enforceablenotice dependent
Terms-of-service clickwrap enforceableyes
Copyright exception modelfair dealing narrow
Text and data mining — commercial statusunsettled
Text and data mining — opt-out mechanismnone
robots.txt legal weightnon binding notice
AI training-specific lawnone
Privacy regimeElectronic Crimes Act 2013 (privacy provisions, in force 2016); Data Protection Act 2023 (Act No. 1 of 2023, assented 9 May 2023; commencement pending ministerial order — NOT YET IN FORCE)
Trespass to chattelsnot recognized

Last reviewed: 2026-05-24. Confidence: low. Not legal advice.