首页    期刊浏览 2024年09月16日 星期一
登录注册

文章基本信息

  • 标题:Treatment of Consumers Under Proposed U.C.C. Article 2B Licenses, 16 J. Marshall J. Computer & Info. L. 315 (1998)
  • 本地全文:下载
  • 作者:Dively, Mary Jo Howard ; Cohn, Donald A.
  • 期刊名称:The John Marshall Journal of Information Technology & Privacy Law
  • 印刷版ISSN:1078-4128
  • 出版年度:2013
  • 卷号:16
  • 期号:2
  • 页码:4
  • 出版社:The John Marshall Law School
  • 摘要:Various provisions in proposed U.C.C. Article 2B seek to increase the protection that is currently afforded to consumers. Generally, consumer law is made up of a series of default rules which operate in commercial settings. The default rules function in such a way as to free commercial entities from having to contract for every minor detail. However, default rules often function to the detriment of consumers because the consumer is not is a position to negotiate the provisions nor can they appreciate the ramifications of the default provisions. The purpose of the U.C.C. has been to provide default rules while insuring the right to contract. Article 2B seeks to maintain the purpose of default rules and insure the right to contract while affording the consumer added protection. Consumers are protected in a number of ways under Article 2B. Article 2B defines a consumer as "an individual who is a licensee of information that at the time of contracting is intended by the individual to be used primarily for personal, family, or household use." Article 2B protects the consumer by allowing the consumer the choice of law, choice of forum, protecting the consumer in cases of electronic error, and a limitation on what is commonly called "hell or high-water clauses." The second means of protecting consumers is by enhancing the protections afforded to "mass-market transactions." A mass market transaction is defined by Article 2B as "a transaction in a retail market involving information directed to the general public as a whole under substantially the same terms for the same information, and involving an end-user licensee that acquired the information under terms and in a quality consistent with an ordinary transaction." Even though the mass market analysis focuses on the transaction itself, consumers are still provided under Amendment 2B. First, the Drafting Committee voted to permit licensees in mass market transactions to have a right of refund if a mass market contract has been formed with terms and conditions that the licensee did not see prior to the creation of the contract. This provision is aimed at so called "shrink-wrap" licenses. Next, Section 2B-304 provides additional consumer protection in mass-market situations by allowing the licensee to terminate a contract if modification of the contract deals with a material term and the licensee determines that the modification is unacceptable. Third, Article 2B requires that both the computer program and physical medium by which
国家哲学社会科学文献中心版权所有