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End User License Agreements
Sebastian: I recently wanted to try out KGS, and it required Sun's latest Java runtime. Well, I thought, Sun is the good empire, I can trust them. But when I read their license agreement (
This is the most egregious "legal" statement I ever read. How do you guys feel about this? Is this legal at all? Is there any way we as consumers or small-time programmers can protect ourselves against this blatant abuse of our legal system?
Velobici: License agreements may contain restrictions that are not legally enforceable. Indeed, they may contain clauses that contradict existing state law. Unfortunately, the Federal Government (US) and the States allow companies to attach such agreements to their products despite the non-enforceable nature of the clauses. The
Following the most recent set of Windows virii, Microsoft is pushing federal government sanction to allow Microsoft to update computers as necessary. What consistutes as necessary and what limitations will be placed on the nature of the upgrade is an item of discussion among the industry lobbyists and the congress critter's staffers. Bill: I am afraid that it is standard. Some years ago I declined to join a sponsored mailing list because of such language. From what I hear, it is not necessarily enforceable. It certainly is ridiculous. As for getting a law passed outlawing such crapola, the trend in recent legislation seems to be going the other way, favoring huge corporations at the expense of ordinary citizens. :-( unkx80: Looks way too standard to me. Is that the only end user license agreement you ever read? I think this template is used almost everywhere. Bignose: Not at all. A great deal of software is licensed such that the user is treated as a valuable asset, rather than a potential criminal. CGoban1 (but not later versions), and GnuGo are two examples familiar to Go players. The above insanely-restrictive "agreement", which almost no users would actually agree with, is common, but by no means universal. We have the power to choose software from people who treat us like customers and equals, rather than consumers and criminals.
Malweth: The difference with CGoban1 and GnuGo is that they are firstly not commercial products, secondly not professional products, and finally they do implicitly include the same effect as in the Sun EULA segment given above. If CGoban1 or GnuGo had a bug that made it incompatible with your computer (for whatever reason) a lawsuit against them would be laughed at. Furthermore, GnuGo, assuming its name is accurate, does have a license covered in the
This is a copy of the living page "End User License Agreements" at Sensei's Library. ![]() |