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Site Says 'Go Away!'; Federal Court Says No

CaptainEbo writes "Michael Snow was the webmaster of Stop Corporate Extortion, a private support group website for 'individuals who have been, are being, or will be sued by any Corporate entity.' In order to access his site, users were required to register a username and password, and agree to a statement saying they were not associated with DirecTV, Inc. Several defendants in suits brought by DirecTV would discuss their cases on Snow's site. When DirecTV's employees and lawyers ignored Snow's user agreement and accessed his site anyway, Snow sued, claiming they violated the Stored Communications Act (SCA) by accessing his site without authorization. In an unanimous opinion, the Eleventh Circuit rejected Snow's suit."

14 of 546 comments (clear)

  1. ohhh ... EULA by karearea · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Where does this leave things like EULAs?

    1. Re:ohhh ... EULA by CaptainEbo · · Score: 5, Informative
      Karearea~ A commenter on the linked to site left this remark about EULAs, which I believe is a correct statement of the law:
      EULAs and the like are governed by contract law, which is a completely different ballgame than the SCA. Under contract law, an agreement is valid if one party offers something to another, the offer is accepted, and both parties agree to give something up. In the context of a EULA, the text of the EULA is the offer, clicking on "I Agree" is the acceptance. That means that so long as the last requirement (both parties give something up) is met, that click-through agreements are valid for EULA purposes.
      In short, this case only dealt with the meaning of a particular statute (the SCA). EULAs rely on contract law, which are a totally different area of the law. This decision should not effect EULAs.
    2. Re:ohhh ... EULA by MamiyaOtaru · · Score: 5, Insightful

      More importantly, where does it leave warez sites that only let you in if you agree not to be a law enforcement officer?

    3. Re:ohhh ... EULA by Mistlefoot · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This both makes sense and doesn't.

      "While the court did not explain just what sort of security measures would invoke the SCA, it did hint that a webmaster who "screens the registrants before granting access" would have a stronger claim than one who merely asks his registrants to "self screen"

      Imagine having a bar with a sign out front saying "if you are under the legal age you cannot purchase alcohol here. By entering you are agreeing you are of legal age". You can't just sell alcohol to anyone entering because they agreed they were old enough.

      You need to "screen of registrants" or patrons in this case.

      At the same time the "underage" drinkers will be charged and deemed responsible for their actions (even though the bar may be charged or lose their license as well).

    4. Re:ohhh ... EULA by Kamineko · · Score: 5, Informative

      It leaves them exactly where they were: Here.

    5. Re:ohhh ... EULA by Maxmin · · Score: 5, Informative

      Reread the parent post - they sued under the SCA, not contract law. Any precedent and case law applies only to the provisions of law invoked by the plaintiff.

      --
      O lord, bless this thy holy hand grenade, that with it thou mayest blow thine enemies to tiny bits, in thy mercy.
    6. Re:ohhh ... EULA by mctk · · Score: 5, Insightful

      However, even more important is the fact that teenie-boppers can feel justified when they click those "Yes, I am 18" links!

      --
      Paul Grosfield - the quicker picker upper.
    7. Re:ohhh ... EULA by CaptainEbo · · Score: 5, Informative

      The SCA is a federal statute, passed by Congress & signed by the President. It applies only when the conditions specifically described in the statute are met. In this case, those conditions are access of stored communications "without authorization". The text of the statute also contains an exception, which says that even if stored communications were accessed w/o authorization, the statute does not apply if those communications are "readily acessible to the general public." According to the Eleventh Circuit, merely requiring the user to click a button saying they agree that they are not something does not prevent a site from being "readily accessible to the general public." Contract law is hundreds of years old, based on the English common law, and modified somewhat by state legislatures. Under the common law of contracts, there are three elements to a contract: 1) An offer 2) An acceptance 3) Consideration (meaning that both parties agree to give something up) Because contract law is governed by state law, it is rarely raised in federal courts, such as the Eleventh Circuit (there are exceptions, under something called "diversity jurisdiction" or "supplimental jurisdiction" but I imagine the readers of Slashdot don't want me to give them an entire semester's worth of Civil Procedure). When a contract claim is raised in the proper court, however, a contract will generally be deemed to exist if the three elements mentioned above exist.

    8. Re:ohhh ... EULA by Vengie · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Property owners that shoot trespassers will end up going to jail for attempted murder in virtually any US jurisdiction, unless you're talking "breaking and entering my home in the middle of the night." I can't tell if you're trying to bait me or asking a serious question. If the latter, post some contact info and I'll explain the state of the law to your heart's content. I was merely discussing adverse posession. I can assure you, the use of force to combat civil conversion of property is a crime anywhere in the united states, no matter what you have posted. [If someone trespasses on your SHOOTING RANGE and you have a sign posted that says "trespassers will be shot" and they get shot, you're probably screwed. If you have a sign up that says "THIS IS A SHOOTING RANGE, YOU MAY BE IN DANGER" and you tell the cops that you intentionally shot him, you're also screwed. You cannot post a sign that says "trespassers may be shot." Signs that say "beware of dog" are akin to the signs that say "this is a shooting range." If you *intentionally* "release the hounds" (i.e. an attack dog) on a trespasser you will go to jail.)

      --
      When in doubt, parenthesize. At the very least it will let some poor schmuck bounce on the % key in vi. (Larry Wall)
    9. Re:ohhh ... EULA by kfg · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The money you pay is your consideration.

      In the case of boxed software the consideration is made to the retailer for a piece of physical property, not to the rights holder for the license.

      And a license is not a contract. A license is a grant of limited rights. A license may be a valid license without being a contract at all, as most commercial EULAs are not.

      They are often worded in doublespeak as if they were asking you to give something up, such as saying that you cannot copy the program to more than one computer, but this is actually a grant to copy to one computer. You are not giving up the right to copy to more than one computer because you never had that right in the first place.

      EULAs are very carefully worded to give the impression that they are contracts without ever actually including any legally enforceable (certain commercial obligations of the licensee and rights held by the licensor cannot be altered by contract, they are a matter of law) contractual terms.

      The GPL, oddly enough, is both a valid license and a contract, because it fully spells out the articles of consideration by both parties, the permanent assignment of what would otherwise be exlusive rights of distribution.

      KFG

  2. This is a blatant double standard by Zork+the+Almighty · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It seems more and more like we have a double standard when it comes to "computer trespass" laws. People can be threatened with prosecution for downloading files which a company mistakenly posts on a public webserver, yet when it comes to a citizen and their own personal site they have no mechanism to keep people out.

    --

    In Soviet America the banks rob you!
  3. It's not a double standard. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This isn't a double standard by any means. It's what many call the "American standard".

    This man's first offense was not being a corporation. His second was daring to question the actions of corporations.

    The standards are quite clearly set. Individuals are not allowed to take a stance against corporations or their actions. Corporate greed trumps all. It's very evident how the system works.

    1. Re:It's not a double standard. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Exactly. If you doubt what the parent says, or think he's just being cynical, try distributing the Sony rootkit yourself and see what happens to you.

  4. woman's bathrooms by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Does this mean I as a man can now go into woman's bathrooms and showers and such? There is just a sign! There is no real screening process! Woot!