Licensing law may have national reach
The controversial software licensing measure UCITA soon becomes law in Maryland, and it has potential national implications for all end-user organizations
In less than a month, a controversial software licensing measure will become
law for the first time, in Maryland. And it's an event with potential national
implications for all end-user organizations.
After Oct. 1, when Maryland's law takes effect, if information managers
aren't paying attention to the fine print when they buy shrink-wrapped software
or click "I accept" for online agreements, they may be committing their
organizations to contract terms based on Maryland's version of the Uniform
Computer Information Transaction Act (UCITA).
Despite that potential, legal experts aren't expecting licensers, in
land-grab style, to begin citing Maryland law in their contracts. UCITA
is still new, complex and legally unsettled. Years of court challenges undoubtedly
lie ahead.
But vendors can still cite Maryland law as their "choice of law" in
a licensing contract, no matter where the vendor and licensee are located,
said Jean Braucher, a University of Arizona law professor and critic of
the measure. "The key point is, you don't need any connection with Maryland,
at least under UCITA," she said.
The Chicago-based National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State
Laws sent UCITA to legislatures of all U.S. states and territories for consideration
last year. It is intended to bring a consistent set of rules to licensing
agreements.
Stephanie Reel, chief information officer at Johns Hopkins University
in Baltimore, said her main concern with UCITA "is the ability of software
vendors to reach in and disable software that they believe is inappropriately
being managed or licensed."
Only Virginia and Maryland have adopted UCITA so far. Maryland has formed
a working group to study UCITA's implementation, and the group may recommend
amendments. Maryland formed the group, in part, to respond to the concerns
of critics that the legislation is flawed.
Virginia has delayed its implementation until July 2001, pending a study
by the state's legislative Joint Commission on Technology and Science.
Distributed by IDG News Service.
RELATED LINKS
"UCITA gets slight modification" [civic.com, Aug. 15, 2000] /civic/articles/2000/0814/web-2ucita-08-15-00.asp
"Gilmore signs UCITA" [civic.com, March 15, 2000] /civic/articles/2000/0313/web-1ucita-03-15-00.asp
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