Jonnan001 - If I'm reading your post #236 correctly, the main reason you contend EULAs are nonbinding is that you must directly agree to the contract AND communicate that agreement to the other party. Is this a fair statement?
Second, how would you define an affirmative response, and how you would define communication in this context. Must a physical signature be applied to a paper contract with both parties (or their representatives) physically present? Are verbal contracts with witnesses and/or records valid? Is an electronic agreement similar in nature to a verbal agreement made over the phone?
Recently (as in, last week) I purchased WoW. I "signed" the EULA on Sunday, about 10:30 AM. During the registration and account set up, I transmitted my name, address, phone number, email address, and payment information as part of the same process which began with accepting the EULA/TOU. That personally identifying information, as well as the time and date at which I agreed to the EULA/TOU contracts, are permanently linked in Blizzard's records with the serial number of the copy of the game I purchased the license to. In what way does this process not constitute a provable acceptance to Blizzard's contract?
As to Blizzard never contending full ownership of all materials, bullshit. They entered the EULA containing the quoted text as part of their evidence, specifically as exhibit 21, in support of their statement of fact. While Blizzard never directly asserts ownership of each copy, they consistently assert that users purchase license to use the game, not a copy of the game itself.
And for your hope this gets overturned, you may well be right. In my estimation you are not; either way we'll see at the end of September/beginning of October.
The basics of an contract (Strictly speaking, the writing on the paper is the 'agreement'. The *contract* is the agreement, plus all legal responsibilities that are implied, i.e. your state may guarantee a warranty and such, fraud clause, et al. Close to, but not quite interchangeable):
Offer - Some one offers you a good or service
Acceptance - I choose to take them up on it
Mutual Assent - We've verified that both understood the terms we were agreeing too.
Capacity - I am an adult, not drugged, etcetera
Consideration - We
exchanged goods, services, money et al
Legality - Nothing was agreed to in violation of the law.
Now, what we're talking about here is an either/or situation:
Either the EULA is bound up with the sales contract, when we pay the store to buy it over the counter, and accepted when we install,
Or the EULA is a separate contract, accepted separately when we install the software.
The problem is that under either of these, it has problems meeting the defintion of a contract.
It is only fair to note that the TOS when you sign up for an account may or may not have these issues - I'm arguing solely about the EULA included with the software - although the EULA being invalid probably impacts the TOS when you create a server account, that *is* actually a different contract, and probably a valid, or in large part valid contract under the UCC.But, back to basics - if the EULA is a part of (modification of) the sales contract, the fact that you were informed of it when you bought it, but did not actually see it, may invalidate it as a contract,
depending on the exact terms of the EULA, and whether you are an expert (merchant) or a non-expert (consumer) in the field. Under UCC 2, you *can* be bound by this kind of modification to the sales contract, but you actually have to be made fully aware of it at the time - you can't have mutual assent, if you are not aware of what you are assenting to.
Now - this is where a merchant and a consumer are judged differently (Remember, for UCC purposes, a 'merchant' is anyone that has expertise in the product being sold), because as an expert in the field, it is
assumed that a merchant is aware of industry standard clauses despite having never seen the contract or read it. A farmer knows the contracts when he sells to the grain mill, the computer programmer knows the standard clauses on what is legal uses of a compiler.
So, for someone that works in that field to claim he's not bound by the EULA, he has to prove that it's trying to utilize a clause that's not normal, which is fairly hard to do - unless it's just a weird, out there clause, a photographer buying photoshop is
probably bound buy the EULA, whether he read it or not.
That's not the case with a 'consumer - the consumer is presumed
not to be an expert in 'industry standard clauses' - if he buys something with a modification to the sales contract, he's supposed to be informed
at the time - before money changes hands, and he has to actually sign off on it - because he's not an expert, he's protected from agreeing to things without knowing what he agreed to.
So,
if the EULA is a modification to the sales contract, it makes a lot of difference whether or not the UCC recognizes me as a merchant, or a consumer, and even whether or not the terms of the EULA are arguably 'standard' terms.
The other possibility is whether the EULA is a
separate contract. There are two major problem with that. The first is that it is easier for either a consumer or a merchant to accept a sales contract, than for
anyone to get locked into a formal, non-sales contract.
By design, UCC 2 streamlines the concept of a contract because who want's to bring a lawyer to buy a loaf of bread? They streamline it further between 'merchants' to allow for standard terms etcetera, so farmers can sell wheat to a silo without messing around with arguing everything out point for point.
So, is it's *not* a sales contract, there is a very big question about trying to prove Offer, Acceptance, and Mutual Assent - Some states require a Notary Public notarize the document. But that's actually not the biggest problem.
If it's a separate contract, where is the consideration? You can modify the sales contract without consideration being passed back and forth, but if this is a separate contract - then there has to be separate consideration, or it *can't* be a contract.
If I bought the CD, and I own the CD for purposes of making a copy, then I don't receive anything more from Blizzard for having accepted the EULA when I installed - I already
had that right. They have to give me something above and beyond that, or they hove no more standing to sue me for using that product anymore than I can sue someone for failing to buy me a gift, even though they promised to do so.
So, if it's a sales contract, UCC 2 steps in and give me
some protection, if it's
not a sales contract, it's almost impossible to rule it as a valid contract at all.
And that's why I think this can and should be overturned - Jonnan