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PC World April 9, 2001 Andrew Brandt |
Click With Caution: User Licenses Get Tough Recent skirmish over Microsoft's terms of service is only the latest user complaint about such documents... |
PC World July 2005 Anne Kandra |
Software Licenses: Fight for Your Rights The software industry is pushing legislation to freeze your rights, and consumers are fighting back to reform the license agreement situation. |
ONLINE January 2001 Vicki L. Gregory |
UCITA: What Does it Mean for Libraries? On October 1, 2000, the Uniform Computer Information Transactions Act (UCITA) became effective in the State of Maryland, the first state in which this controversial proposed uniform legislation has actually become the law... |
Information Today August 11, 2003 Carol Ebbinghouse |
UCITA Stopped, But Librarians and Consumers Remain Vigilant On Aug. 1, 2003, the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws discharged the standby committee of the Uniform Computer Information Transactions Act (UCITA). Librarians, consumer groups, writers, trade groups and others have denounced UCITA. |
Linux Journal November 1, 2002 Lawrence Rosen |
Why We Still Oppose UCITA The author believes that it will be important to start afresh with UCITA and consider the new environment in which open-source software competes against proprietary, closed software marketed by wealthy companies. |
PC World March 20, 2001 Tom Mainelli |
Juno's Revised Service Agreement Irks Users Juno may require its free service users to participate in its distributed computing project by allowing computations to run on their computers during idle time. |
PC Magazine January 1, 2008 Dan Costa |
Jumping Through EULA Hoops "Unconscionable" is a legal term used to void contracts that are unfair to one party because of the other party's superior bargaining power. By my reading, that makes end-user license agreements (EULAs) unenforceable. |
Linux Journal November 22, 2001 Don Marti |
Softman v. Adobe: What it Means for the Rest of Us If you find yourself paying for bundled proprietary software and don't actually install it, you can legally resell it no matter what the End-User License Agreement (EULA) says... |
InternetNews February 18, 2009 Judy Mottl |
Facebook Backtracks on TOS Policy Changes Facebook rethinks its controversial stance on user content, but vows to revisit the issue with member input. |