Click and Accept Software Licenses
q2k sent in this tidbit about "click-wrap" software agreements - an analysis of a couple of court cases over such licenses. Good reading for anyone interested in the subject.
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that would make the license invalid, causing the license to fall back to standard copyright in the Netherlands.
//rdj
No one can understand the truth until he drinks of coffee's frothy goodness.
--Sheikh Abd-Al-Kadir, 1587
What about all of the licenses you have to agree to before you can download sample software. Most of them are just a text field that the web designer left editable. Would it be legally binding if I changed it to say that the company I'm downloading from agrees to pay me $45/hr for demoing their software?
Yep, I never spell check.
More incorrect spellings can be found he
You may not agree when reading the first page, but once you have gone to another page could signify acceptance.
Fight Spammers!
(I checked the document source, but there were no IRONY tags around it.)
How enforceable is that? Not only is it at the BOTTOM of the page (where you won't read it until you hit the end of the article in all Western languages), but you have to have done so BEFORE having read the page content?
John
John
Pithy, yet ultimately meaningless, phrase expressed with gusto!
Yeah, I know... It makes one not want to moderate.
I've given some thought to the moderation system, I don't know if you ever read the Motley Fool over at www.fool.com, but they have a positive-only moderation system. Anyone that reads can "recommend" a post. The top rated posts go into a "Best of" feature. The problem I see with doing that on Slashdot is that people would inevitably use proxies and fake accounts to abuse the system. I think it has a lot to do with the expected maturity level of the audience.
The Fool also does have "censorship" style moderation of spam posts, the admins go through and decide whether to remove a post that has been reported as a problem.
This involves trust of the admins, and I think that the assumption of untrustworthiness is what leads to some of this immature behavior we see on Slashdot and on the Internet in general. We lock our doors in real life, sure, but we don't put up huge walls around our house, and claim it to be totally secure, to do so entices people to try to break in to see just what is so important in there anyway. I think that this escalation of non-trust leads to people trying to break the system just to prove they can.
Over on the Fool, the total recommendations you have received are listed on your profile, but I don't think anyone sees it as a competition. You get a little trinket by your name, Ebay style, after certain numbers of posts, no matter how good or bad they are.
Thanks to the moderators that modded up the other post, I'm glad I'm not the only person that is willing to lose Karma to question the system.
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I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
I submit stories of vital importance to online freedom, and instead some anime shit makes the front page.
I've come to the conclusion, I'm going to start to read at +4 on main page stories, and not post unless it is really really important.
It's dissapointing that Slashdot has become this. My karma slides down every time I moderate, because any idiot can metamoderate, and they usually do so badly.
This whole thing is broken. By allowing negative moderation, creating karma, and arbitrary selection of stories, the creators of Slashdot messed up bad. Karma creates a competition, negative moderation allows for revenge in moderation, and arbitrary story selection means that important news will fall through the cracks.
Whew...
OK, that was worth the 2 karma I will lose when I am modded down. :)
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I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
This is a good article with some actual good news. Why isn't it on the front page? Or has /. resorted to only reporting sensational news that stirs up the anger of nerds everywhere...
Read the article, but this is about whether AOL can enforce certain parts of its click and accept license in a specific case. In particular, their ability to require that cases be tried in Massachusetts.
Here's what AOL did wrong with their agreement:
1. The plaintiffs claim that AOL's software damaged their browsing environment before they even had a chance to read the agreement, much less agree to it.
2. In order to actually read the agreement, you have to select "read the agreement" TWICE in two different screens where the default was "I Agree".
3. Even if you did all that, and then clicked "I don't agree", the software didn't undo the changes it had made to your system.
So, AOL wants to be able to enforce their agreement on people who haven't read it, and on people that chose not to accept it...