Grenada
AI behavior law: bot and agent disclosure, crawler and training-data rules, automated-agent transactions, and algorithmic decision-making.
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.
| Dimension | Value |
|---|---|
| Authorization test | unsettled |
| Public-page carve-out | unsettled |
| Terms-of-service browsewrap enforceable | notice dependent |
| Terms-of-service clickwrap enforceable | yes |
| Copyright exception model | fair dealing narrow |
| Text and data mining — commercial status | unsettled |
| Text and data mining — opt-out mechanism | none |
| robots.txt legal weight | non binding notice |
| AI training-specific law | none |
| Privacy regime | Electronic 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 chattels | not recognized |
Last reviewed: 2026-05-24. Confidence: low. Not legal advice.