Scripsit Edmund GRIMLEY EVANS <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > But in order for it to have any legal validity, you do need to have a > > little click-here-to-agree thing before the user uses the program.
> How can that make any difference? Assuming that we are talking about > law of contract here, how can clicking on a button in the privacy of > your own home can be interpreted as a communication between you and > another party? Obviously there can only be a contract under the assumption that the user needs some right that he has not automatically got before he clicks the button. Probably the argument goes that we're talking about the right to do the copying that is inherent in executing the program, but other variations are also possible. The argument would then go that *ordinarily* the user would expect that he has got the Mystery Right along with the copy of the program. However, when he sees the clickwrap license he gets informed that *this* particular software does not follow the common convention that the Mystery Right comes along with the physical copy. Because the user now knows he does not have the Mystery Right, he will be liable if he nevertheless uses the program without agreeing to the contract offered. Under this reasoning it will always be possible to claim that "I did not accept the contract, so I'm guilty of Mystery Right Infringement instead of breach of contract". If the Mystery Right is assumed this will, however, not be to the advantage of the defendant and the possibility can be ignored. All this is rather far out, but it can probably be made to sound credible enough to fool a judge here or there... -- Henning Makholm "Jeg mener, at der eksisterer et hemmeligt selskab med forgreninger i hele verden, som arbejder i det skjulte for at udsprede det rygte at der eksisterer en verdensomspændende sammensværgelse."