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Cory Doctorow on Shrinkwrap Licenses

An anonymous reader writes "Web privacy advocate Cory Doctorow is on about shrinkwrap licenses, in his latest essay. They've always been onerous. Now, Doctorow says the new EULA in Vista and even the MySpace user agreement could put users at risk of being sued. He closes with: 'By reading this article, you agree, to release me from all obligations and waivers arising from any and all [everything].'"

13 of 125 comments (clear)

  1. Reading the what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    By reading this article, you agree, to release me from all obligations and waivers arising from any and all [everything].'

    This shouldn't be an issue here.

  2. Re:Are they actually binding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    The whole point of the EULA is to ensure that there are so many conditionals that you'll be snagged by at least one or two unpalatable in any given jurisdiction. It doesn't matter if 95% or more of the EULA is outright illegal in your state or country; there'll still be enough leftover to have you by the short 'n' curlies.

  3. Not legally binding anyways ... by jopet · · Score: 4, Informative

    In many countries shrinkwrap licenses or license agreements that you can only agree to after actually buying the product, or that are "implicitly agreed upon" are not legally binding and are contrary to public policy. None of the things included in those "contracts" are legally binding and that includes the exclusion of warranties etc., even if written in all upper case.

    1. Re:Not legally binding anyways ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Not to mention that with a click-through license, there is no way of knowing who agreed to the "contract". I could get my underage kid to agree to the licensing terms, and he will not be legally obligated to abide by them because he is not allowed to enter into a contract at his age. And I can use the computer afterward without having agreed to any terms at all.

    2. Re:Not legally binding anyways ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Here's the news: EULAs are bullshit. They always have been (except in a few benighted countries)... they were always meant to muddy the legal waters rather than enforce their ridiculous conditions.

      Microsoft's dream has always been to enforce EULA restrictions by *technical *means. This means no need to deal with legal matters... want to change things, or enforce patently bullshit restrictions, then they just change them. This is why they started the TCPA, subsequently the TCG (Trusted Computing Group), and spent time designing their dream hardware along with the likes of IBM, Sun, HP etc etc: they call it Trusted Computing, and the hardware is a "TPM"... which will now be installed in every PC (and is already in the Apple Mac). The hardware gives Microsoft (and Apple) the ability to actually enforce the EULA by technical mans... read your EULA, read the specs, and criticisms, and be afraid.

  4. Re:Microsoft suing users? by Chmcginn · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I know, I know, RTFA is so passe... but the point the guy was making was not that Microsoft was going to do this. The point was that some company is going to go bankrupt, and their obligations & contracts will get bought by somebody with the mentality of a patent troll. And that's when people will start getting sued. And if he/she/it's successful, it will encourage others to do the same.

    --
    Have you been touched by his noodly appendage?
  5. Re:Microsoft suing users? by MaggieL · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I can't imagine Microsoft suing a customer over some small print in the EULA. That's just dumb.

    Then why is it there?

    I hope you don't agree to a lot of contracts relying on a belief that they won't be enforced because "it's just dumb".

    This latest corporate fad for retaining a claim to sue while offering a soothing "pledge" not to under vague, unenforceable conditions is lame in the extreme.

    --
    -=Maggie Leber=-
  6. Do we have fair-use rights to EULAS? by Mateo_LeFou · · Score: 3, Funny

    Kinda off-topic, but I was wondering. Given that a EULA contains a huge amount of intellectual property, and that the lawyers who drafted it thus have the right to permt/allow/deny every instance of its use, is it legal to quote from EULAs?

    Shouldn't there be something you have to click through before reading a EULSA.. something that says basically "you cannot view/use/think about this EULA except under the terms define below... "

    --
    My turnips listen for the soft cry of your love
    1. Re:Do we have fair-use rights to EULAS? by nomadic · · Score: 5, Funny

      we are allowed to quote things to make our point.

  7. This *is* something to be worried about by Lloyd_Bryant · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Many of the posters in this topic seem to have adopted the "that'll never happen" mentality. After all, there's no real chance of a corporation *successfully* suing people over these outrageous EULAs, is there?

    I would like to remind those posters of the methodology used by the RIAA - threaten, harass, sue, and in the unlikely case that the victim actually puts up a fight, drop the case and run away.

    Consider how many people, in the face of a mere *threat* to sue from the RIAA, have rolled over and paid the amount that the RIAA was demanding? Perhaps these people are cowards. More likely, they simply calculated that paying up would be much cheaper than hiring an attorney and fighting it out.

    A EULA troll could exploit the same methods.

    And the only thing that could put a stop to it would be a firm ruling by the courts that EULAs are in fact non-enforceable. A ruling which the trolls would avoid like the plague by using the cut-and-run tactic whenever faced with somebody who appears inclined to fight.

    After reading TFA, I sat back and attempting to count just how many of those EULAs I had clicked through without bothering to read (after all, everyone *knows* that they are non-enforceable, don't they?). I can't be sure, but the number is most certainly at least three digits.

    I suspect that most *present* EULAs simply don't contain anything that could be used for this purpose. That doesn't mean that *future* EULAs won't include them *deliberately*.

    How long before Wiki has an entry titled "EULA bomb"?

    --
    Don't tell me to get a life. I had one once. It sucked.
  8. Most EULAs are boilerplate by Infonaut · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Given that a EULA contains a huge amount of intellectual property...

    Actually most EULAs consist of the same language used in other EULAs. In that sense they are full of what in copyright is referred to as "scenes a faire," or components that are common to a particular type of work. For example, a movie about the Middle Ages might show some poor wretch gnawing on a piece of stale bread. This is so common that that particular scene in itself has no special creativity.

    EULAs have at best a thin layer of creativity in the selection of certain stock phrases in order to compose a whole. In that sense they are probably akin to literary compilations, which have a very thin layer of copyright over the selection and presentation of the collected works. In the case of EULAs, I think it would be difficult to say that "You agree to indemnify and hold harmless..." and other stock phrases are anything more than scenes a faire.

    I was talking with a rather high-powered copyright lawyer about this a few months ago, and he agreed with my assessment. There doesn't see to be any real pertient caselaw on this, so all opinions are equal until someone finds reason to bring suit for copying of EULA terms. I can't really see why any company would bother with it though. The language of a EULA is not something worth protecting, because in itself it does not produce revenue.

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
  9. Clickwraps and shrinkwraps are binding in US by Infonaut · · Score: 3, Interesting

    In the United States, both forms of license agreement are binding. However, they must be presented in such a way that the mythical "reasonable person" would find them before using the product or service being licensed. For example, you can't place the shrinkwrap license on page 52 of the user manual for that new Dell. It has to be obvious, easily-spotted, and not buried in the box. With clickwraps, the Specht v. Netscape case established that they must be presented in a fashion such that it is clear and obvious that there is a license involved. You as the end user can elect not to read it, but you have been presented the opportunity to read it, so the law assumes that you have.

    However, contract law in the United States still provides that bizarre terms in a licensing agreement will be held invalid. That does not mean that the entire contract is invalid, just that the offending sections would be. For example, if I buy a new iPod and the license agreement states that the first $10k I make next year will be sent to Apple in order to fund their 2007 New Years Eve party, such a term would be found by a court to be outside the boundaries of a license relating to an iPod purchase.

    None of this means that EULAs aren't a pain in the ass. They are a pain to deal with, even for lawyers. I worked on one a while back, and I can see why they become so complicated. Corporate lawyers want to protect themselves from users who see juicy targets in successful companies. For example, EULAs relating to Internet services always have sections dealing with reliability of service. Companies have to expressly say that they are not guaranteeing 100% uptime, or someone will come out of the woodwork and sue them, saying they had a reasonable expectation of 100% uptime because the company marketed itself as a very reliable provider. Companies put in a lot of redundant language because they are trying to make it abundantly clear as to what they are not agreeing to and not guaranteeing. That way they they can defend themselves in court by saying that anyone who had even glanced over the EULA would understand that the company went out of its way to inform the user.

    Unfortunately the effect is a complicated, hard to read document. Contract lawyers are slowly starting to change their approach. I've seen a few EULAs that use far less language, in an attempt to make the contract more intellible. Their argument in court would then be that although they didn't put in redundant language, their language was brief and clear enough that it was more likely to be read. I personally think this is a smarter, more common-sense way to go.

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
  10. Re:Except for all the country... by GodInHell · · Score: 3, Informative

    ... where, if part of the contrat is illegal, then the whole contract is made null. In other word for all those country, making statement for example to make user sign up their basic right, or even consumer-protection right, is illegal, would simply nullify the EULA. So... The left over won't do shit in such case. That's an intresting (wrong) interpretation.

    Actually courts will usually do what they can to save a contract within interpretation - and will nullfy portions of the contract that cannot be enforced. But no, writing a contract so that it includes clauses which are unenforceable (ie giving up your basic human rights) does not void (the correct term) the contract.

    An illegal contract - one that is a contract to commit a crime (ie Rob that bank and I'll help you sell the gold for a 50/50 cut of all proceeds) is - yes - null and void in all states I don't think there are any EULAs out there in the main stream that include contract for crime though - so points for getting one legal principle correct, losses for applying it to the wrong case.

    -GiH
    (No, not a lawyer, just a law student).