Jonnan - a bit of indirect personal experience, if I may. One of my friends from high school is a lawyer who specializes in debt collection and representing creditors in bankrupcy cases. You would be floored by the percentage of people who use "I signed it, but that doesn't mean I knew what it said" as a defense, and it almost never works. This holds true for utility bills, car loans, morgages, and damn near anything else. Clearly, even having someone hold consumers' hands through a contract, having them initial various paragraphs, etc. does not prevent consumers who either don't read what they sign or simply refuse to comprehend that they can actually be held to an agreement.
The same applies to EULAs. Consumers are given warning that such an agreement is required, with instructions on how to find the full text before purchase. If a consumer is unwilling to seek information they are told is relevant, there is no reason to believe the majority of them will read it even if they are forced to sign it before buying. The consumer protections are ineffective because they can't protect the consumer from himself - no merchant needs to intentionally deceive the consumer who is willing to do the dirty work for them.
You keep pulling out these apples and oranges comparisons and throwing them out as being somehow relevant. Why?
Of *course* mortgages and such are enforcable. Maybe you've never done a mortgage or a bankruptcy or a loan, but my home mortgage had a PhD thesis worth of paper, a realtor to answer every question I had, two lawyers. Hell Willy, my *lease* before I bought my house was five pages with me initialling relevant paragraphs.
Yet you keep bringing out these as being somehow relevant to a sales contract where you bought something at a store.
For the distiction between merchant and consumer, to be truly an either/or definition, they would need one of two things. Either:
A ) both terms are defined in such a way as to prevent any person from falling into both catergories, and no person can fail to fall into one or the other class.
or
B ) one is defined in relation to the other. "A consumer is defined as any person who does not meet the definition of merchant as defined in...."
Failing either of those, the distinction is not definite. If UCC intended such a distinction, they sould have written it into the law explicitly.h
Willy - Yes or No question to you.
Does the UCC offer definitions for "Consumer" and "Merchant"? Yes or No
Does it then state that there are specific requirements for a modification to a sales Contract that must be in place if the buyer is a "Consumer", but not if the buyer is a "Merchant"? Yes or No
If you answer yes to both of those questions, then the question about whether the definitions are clear or how they apply in a specific circumstance is an argument for a specific case. Personally, while I agree the definitions *could* be clearer, I don't think there is all that much in the way of grey area open for argument, and frankly, I think you're trying rather desperately to emphasize the minor theoretical ambiguities so you can simply ignore the fact that, in reference to a game, there really is absolutely no ambiguity about the fact that a game is bought "primarily for personal, family, or household purposes."
Guess what - the fact that you don't *like* the way the definitions are worded doesn't render them irrelevant. Moreover - go actually read the wording of UCC 2 where it distinguishes the two. Typically the main law is written with the merchant consumer interaction in mind, with the *exceptions* being stated as "Except as Between Merchants", so if those definitions were to be magically swept away so as to not annoy you, my argument against this interpretation of the law would actually be *stronger*.
Regardless, the definitions *are* there, UCC 2 defines definite differences in the creation of contracts based on where the two entities stand in reference to those definitions, and unless your argument is that they are annoying to you therefore meaningless, they make a difference.
From post #308 by Jonnan001
What do you want me to say - you are correct - you can find a bad decision in every district, but those bad decisions will, in the wrong run, harm everyone.
Once you've used this argument, you can't honestly expect me to put much effort into finding precedents to prove you wrong - you just bypass them and move on. You've done it before and will certainly do it again.
You have posted several cases. I did not bypass them and move on - I explained, point by point, *why* I thought they were not relevant.
Generally it was because the defendent seemed to obviously fall under the definition of "Merchant" - which, perhaps not coincidentally, seems to be about the time you decided that you really hated the definition of "Merchant" and "Consumer".
If you post a case that has a consumer, and I can post a link back to the definition of consumer and undermine the argument again, then sure, yeah, I'm, going to argue it's a bad decision. If you can post a case that involves a consumer, and I *can't* undermine the argument simply by posting a link to the UCC text (again), then it's just possible that you've got the case that supports your point of view.
But so far, you keep posting cases that even you haven't seemed to actually read, because the defendants are typically merchants. Don't blame me for that.
The problem is that by attempting a legal solution to a technical problem, imo at least, the damage allowing *this* kind of broad enforcement of an EULA is going to cause far more damage than it's worth, because in order for this to be a useful solution, you have to discard immense numbers of consumer protections that were placed *into* contract law originally because it was abused too often over the years.
If I were to correct what you just said to accurately reflect the opinion you've repeatedly expressed, the preceding would read "the damage allowing *any* kind of enforcement of EULAs is going to cause more damage than it's worth..." You have held that EULAs are unenforcable in their entirety, not that this is an unacceptably broad enforcement of an otherwise allowable contract. Please be consistent.
Good Lord - Make long detailed posts, they complain that your posts take forever to read. Try to make them concise, and they quote you with no context at all like a girlfriend that remembers a slight from three years ago and brings it up when she's ticked that you left the toilet seat up.
I'm sorry, you're being - the polite word is disingenous. While I will happily argue for more limited enforcement even between "Merchants", I believe I've been consistent is stating that my primary concern is that a consumer should not be required to have a lawyers skills in order to play a fricking game. That is not at all the opinion you claim I've repeatedly expressed, nor the fact that I posted, in the actual Questionairre post, the annotation that the UCC did specifically allow for waivers.
Given how much it bothers you that there are protections for consumers against legal chicanery, I would be more than happy to donate some funds for the wormhole that helps you migrate to some Ayn Randian paradise where you can live your life in contentment knowing that if you buy a pack of lifesavers with an EULA on the inside wrapper annotating that you've donated your kidneys, you can expect to wake up in a bath-tub sans kidneys. But First, I have a few forms for you to sign off on because, well, frankly, I don't think you are nearly as smart as you think you are, and I want dibs on your stuff afterward.
Not to bring this discussion back to the original case or anything, but has anyone besides me read the motion for injunction and MDY's response? Despite the ruling against MDY, they have continued supporting and selling Glider. Blizzard asked for a permanent injunction for MDY, donnelly himself, or anyone associated with the company to: .....
Original Case? The first post was "In his summary ruling on Blizzard's case against World of Warcraft cheat-maker Michael Donnelly (released yesterday), District Court Judge David Campbell has stated that the act of using a bot in violation of a game's license or terms of use qualifies as a copyright violation. Huh?"
So, no, it's pretty much the Summary Judgement ignoring "Consumer" that I care about - the rest of the case is still in a state of flux.
Sure, I think MDY and Donnely is a bunch of pricks myself, but whether I'm right or wrong, the court has methods for enforcing it's orders, MDY has Lawyers for arguing it's side for injunctions, and Blizzard has lawyers with Word templates specifically for filing injunctions.
Unless there's something new that pertains to the original summary judgement, I'm not sure I care that much about the rest.
MDY would be unlikely to recover its business, even if the injunction is lifted after a few months.
Heh, I think that's kinda the point here . . .
Asking for an order to prevent release of the source code seems to be something new. Blizzard really seems to be worried about this bot.
That's part of the point, but MDY is correct in arguing that a temporary injunction that destroys their buisiness is overkill, considering how long the current situation has lasted.
As for the sorce code, remember that Glider is so much more effective than other bots due to the fact that they stole the source code for the Warden program to make it. No one else has that, and Blizzard doesn't want it getting out.
They have my sympathies on that - the last thing they want is GLIDER 2.0, with a GPL license - {G}. But althought I've heard a number of people throw around accusations of their having stolen "Warden" everything the case actually says in the summary judgement seems to be that they reverse engineered it, which, being protected under the DMCA, seems to have been one of their wins. If they stole it, that would fall under trade secret law, not DMCA *or* copyright, and you can get your company raped right royally violating that, so if it's not mentioned in the lawsuit, I'm inclined to assume it never happened.
Jonnan