Erich Forler [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > In order to be effective, however, the contract must be binding upon the > persons who enter into it. In some jurisdictions, contracts entered into > by minors are deemed by law to be not binding upon them or to be > voidable at the option of the minor. As a result, if a licensor of > software attempts to enter into a contract with a minor regarding the > use of software it runs the risk that the terms of the end user license > agreement may not be enforceable. > > The purpose of the minor clause, therefore, is to ensure that the > license agreement that is entered into between the licensors of the > software (ie. the many contributors of code) and the users of the > software is a valid and binding one.
Explain, then, how this same logic applies to accepting code that was written by minors (the contributors of the code) and ensuring that the license agreement entered into between those minors and Corel (who is redistributing the code per the license they are accepting from those minors) is a valid and binding one. -- Jeremy Blosser | [EMAIL PROTECTED] | http://jblosser.firinn.org/
pgpIkC6KbYzqH.pgp
Description: PGP signature