75. See Perritt, supra note 10, at 49; Hardy, supra note 62a, at 1019 ("The parallels [between the development of the Law Merchant and] cyberspace are strong. Many people interact frequently over networks, but not always with the same people each time so that advance contractual relations are not always practical. Commercial transactions will more and more take place in cyberspace, and more and more those transactions will cross national boundaries and implicate different bodies of law. Speedy resolution of disputes will be as desirable as it was in the Middle Ages! The means of an informal court system are in place in the form of on-line discussion groups and electronic mail. A 'Law Cyberspace' co-existing with existing laws would be an eminently practical and efficient way of handling commerce in the networked world"); Post, supra note 50a, at par. 43 and n. 15.