UCITA Approved In Maryland
Anonymous Coward writes: "According to this, Maryland's governor has approved UCITA. It makes me ashamed to be from Maryland." This isn't a surprise...let's just note it for the record, shall we?
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There's really no room for discussion on this topic is there? Since it's obvious that UCITA doesn't do squat to protect consumers and has everything to do with protecting businesses, who here has anything to say except "This law sucks."
What are the chances that this thing will stand up in court, anyway? Let me think... shrinkwrap licenses and friends designed to make reviewing the license incredibly inconvenient or impossible before accepting them. Last time I checked, judges are consumers, not businesses, and I just can't see any of them upholding this crap knowing that they too will have to agree to terms they can't see.
I like to play children's songs in minor keys.
"We're all sons of bitches now." --J. Robert Oppenheimer
Look at the severity of what we're talking about. When the topic of the UCITA first came up it was always front page fodder, then, after nothing being posted on it for a while suddenly it's passed and its approval goes without mention on the front page because, "it was expected?" Come on! It's not too late to challenge this, it's currently up for approval in many others states. Idly languishing by instead of continuing to actively make our voices heard will only prove that we don't care about the blatent infringement of our rights by corporations.
If I could only live my life with my threshold at 4...
As a Maryland resident and a software professional, I'm deeply disturbed by the passage of this law. I want to know how we who is going to go to court and try and get a restraining order to keep this law from being inforced, like the ACLU & EFF did with the CDA.
"The axiom 'An honest man has nothing to fear from the police'
Why is it that the proponents of "one nation under God" are so eager to get rid of "liberty and justice for all"?
When it's Maryland's version of the UCITA! The legislature made extensive pro-consumer changes to the recommended act before passing it. This act could go down in history as a good thing for consumer rights in the digital age -- it lays down the new law, and brings the software industry in line with so many other industries essential for modern living.
I think it's a positive sign that Maryland's version of this inevitable legislation will be availible for review by the remaining 48 states before they finish debating the UCITA. Is anyone else of the same mind?