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PRINCIPLES OF THE LAW OF SOFTWARE CONTRACTS

WELCOME TO OUR WEBINAR. PRINCIPLES OF THE LAW OF SOFTWARE CONTRACTS. Monday, June 29, 2009 | 9:00 a.m. PST. *This webinar is offered for informational purposes only, and the content should not be construed as legal advice on any matter. PRINCIPLES OF THE LAW OF SOFTWARE CONTRACTS.

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PRINCIPLES OF THE LAW OF SOFTWARE CONTRACTS

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  1. WELCOME TO OUR WEBINAR PRINCIPLES OF THE LAW OF SOFTWARE CONTRACTS Monday, June 29, 2009 | 9:00 a.m. PST *This webinar is offered for informational purposes only, and the content should not be construed as legal advice on any matter.

  2. PRINCIPLES OF THE LAW OF SOFTWARE CONTRACTS Mark RadcliffePartnerCorporate and SecuritiesDLA Piper Jeffrey SternExecutive DirectorLaw DivisionMorgan Stanley Karen CopenhaverPartnerChoate, Hall & Stewart LLP

  3. Mark Radcliffe • Mark Radcliffe is a partner at DLA Piper and counsels companies in their intellectual property and licensing matters.  He is the outside General Counsel of the Open Source Initiative on a pro bono basis. In 2009, he was named by Intellectual Asset Management Magazine as one of the World’s Leading 250 IP Strategists. In 1997, he was named by the National Law Journal to their list of 100 Most Influential Lawyers in the US.

  4. DLA Piper The Firm • Lawyers in 67 offices and 29 countries • The US practice includes approximately 1,400 lawyers • In Europe and Asia, the firm has approximately 2,300 lawyers • The largest law firm in the world by number of lawyers and the only firm in the world with 1,400 lawyers on each side of the Atlantic Our Clients • We represent more than 140 of the top 250 companies in the Fortune 500 • We represent nearly half of the FTSE 250 or their subsidiaries • For top 200 clients, average revenue has increased more than 400% over a five-year period

  5. Jeff Stern • Jeff Stern is Chair of Association of Corporate Counsel's IT, Privacy & eCommerce Committee. He is an Executive Director in the Law Division of Morgan Stanley. He is Chair of the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association Open Source Working Group and served in that capacity on Committee C in drafting the General Public License Version 3. Jeff is included in Who’s Who in the World and Who’s Who in American Law. • *The views expressed by Jeff are not necessarily those of Morgan Stanley.

  6. ACC IT, Privacy & eCommerce Committee (“ITPEC”) • Over 4,000 in-house counsel members practicing IT, privacy or ecommerce law • Licensees, Licensors • Large companies, Small Companies • Range of industries • Information sharing • Regular calls, presentations, events, collaboration with local chapters • Advocacy role • The Principles • Privacy best practices • IT & ecommerce law • You are invited to join at www.acc.com if you are not a member already.

  7. Karen Copenhaver • Karen Copenhaver is a partner at Choate, Hall & Stewart LLP and counsels business clients in the drafting and negotiation of strategic alliances, technology transfer and licensing of intellectual property.  She is the Director of Intellectual Property Strategy at the Linux Foundation and is listed in Chambers USA. In 2009, she was named by Intellectual Asset Management Magazine as one of the World’s Leading 250 IP Strategists. 

  8. Choate, Hall & Stewart LLP • One of the nation’s leading law firms • Focus on core group of specialized services • 200 lawyers located in Boston all under one roof • Clients include public and private companies, private equity and venture capital firms, Fortune 500 companies, leading financial institutions and wealthy individuals • Lawyers throughout practice areas consistently receive national recognition CHOATE HALL & STEWART LLP

  9. What is a “Principle” • ALI has characterized Principles as “expressing the law as it should be, which may not reflect the law as it is.” • “These Principles seek to clarify and unify the law of software transactions . . . Instead of restating the law, a Principles project accounts for the case law and recommends best practices . . . a Principles project is not the law unless and until a court adopts it.”

  10. Why Should You Care? • The Principles propose substantial changes to existing case and statutory law • Represent a decided shift in the balance of interests underlying existing law • Written for judges, these proposed changes will not go through legislative review • ALI is obviously a very prestigious and highly regarded institution and the Principles are likely to be used by judges • UNCITRAL is already considering adopting for other countries

  11. How did we get here? • ALI’s longstanding policies prohibit the free distribution of draft documents and are not designed to invite public comment • Many individuals and organizations tried to intercede to delay adoption and to encourage ALI to invite input from the industry and other interested parties Letter on behalf of OSI and the Linux Foundation http://www.slideshare.net/markradcliffe/osi-and-linux-foundation-letter Letter on behalf of Microsoft and the Linux Foundation http://www.slideshare.net/markradcliffe/microsoft-linux-foundation-letter1 Letter on behalf of ITPEC http://www.slideshare.net/markradcliffe/acc-itpec-letter-and-discussion-points-re-ali-principles-of-the-law-of-software-contracts-5-11-09x

  12. ITPEC and the ALI Principles of the Law of Software Contracts • ITPEC not focused on the Principles until March ‘09 • Principles did not receive same attention as its predecessors in UCC 2B or UCITA because same level of approval not required • Asks Judges to adopt on a “voluntary” basis significant changes in law without legislative action or common law precedent • ITPEC contacted the ALI Reporter leading the project in April • Started dialogue/scheduled comments and call • Mobilized ITPEC subcommittee to review and comment on the Principles

  13. ITPEC and the ALI Principles of the Law of Software Contracts • May 11, 2009 Letter to ALI • Targeted a dozen areas raising concerns • “would create uncertainty, introduce cost and limit flexibility for businesses and consumers without a clear benefit” • Requested (i) broader involvement by in-house counsel, (ii) extension before Principles finalized, and (iii) draft Principles should be posted on Internet for comment free of charge • Follow up communication between ITPEC and ALI • ALI agreed to incorporate some changes but agreement to disagree on most issues • In mid-May ALI approved the Principles for publication • ALI is still revising and will release final draft shortly

  14. Major Issues • Non-disclaimable Warranty of no Hidden Material Defects • (Section 3.05) • Implied obligation to Indemnify against Infringement • (Section 3.01) • Standard Form of Transfer • (Section 2.02) • Disclaimer of Warranties • (Sections 3.02, 3.06 and 4.01)

  15. Section 3.05 Other Implied WarrantiesNo Hidden Material Defect “A transferor that receives money or a right to payment of a monetary obligation in exchange for the software warrants to any party in the normal chain of distribution that the software contains no material hidden defects of which the transferor was aware at the time of the transfer. This warranty may not be excluded. In addition, this warranty does not displace an action for misrepresentation or its remedies.” The Principles explain that “[a] defect exists if the software is not fit for its ordinary purposes” and that “[n]egligence on the part of transferors in failing to discover defects is not covered by the Section and is the subject of products-liability law.” The Principles state, “[s]oftware that requires major workaround to achieve contract-promised functionality and causes long periods of downtime or never achieves promised functionality ordinarily would constitute a material defect.” The Principles state that this new, non-disclaimable warranty does not replace a separate claim for misrepresentation.

  16. Section 3.05 Other Implied WarrantiesPotential Problems • Severely limits freedom of contract; is inconsistent with other statutes: all implied warranties are disclaimable under UCC, Magnusson Moss Warranty Act and Song Beverly Warranty Act • What is the problem which this provision is determined to solve? • Why is this remedy needed in the software context in particular?

  17. Section 3.05 Implied Warrantyof No Hidden Material Defect • What does it mean for a company to be “aware” of a hidden defect? • What does “defect” mean, particularly in the context of software in which there are tradeoffs between different legitimate development approaches that could, with the benefit of hindsight, be recast as defects? • Security tradeoffs, System limitation tradeoffs, Betas/early releases • What happens when a material defect is “found” ? • Opens door to litigation • Lure of unlimited liability: disclaimers, including of direct and consequential damages, do not apply • Discovery costs

  18. Section 3.01 Implied Indemnification Against Infringement • Similar to UCC warranty of non infringement: • Software transferor who deals in software of the kind or holds itself out as having special knowledge or skill • Receives money or a right to payment of monetary consideration • US federal or state intellectual property law at time of transfer • Indemnify and hold harmless software transferee • Disclaimer possible • Only if in a “record”, is conspicuous and uses language that gives transferee reasonable notice • Course of performance, course of dealing, usage of trade • Note: Disclaimer of all “implied warranties” is per se not sufficient

  19. Infringement Remedies (Section 3.01(b)) • “The transferor must pay those costs and damages incurred by the transferee that are specifically attributable to such claim or those costs and damages agreed to in a monetary settlement of such claim.” • “If a court enjoins the transferee’s use of the software or holds the software infringing . . . transferor may be liable for [expectation damages] . . . and . . . must” • Procure right to continue to use software • Replace or modify software with non-infringing; or • Cancel and refund fees (prorated) • “Transferor must also reimburse the transferee for incidental expenses incurred in replacing the software . . . .”

  20. Standard Form of Transfer • “Standard form of transfer of generally available software” is defined as “a transfer using a standard form of (1) a small number of copies of software to an end user; or (2) the right to access software to a small number of end users if the software is generally available to the public under substantially the same standard terms” (see Section 1.01(l)). • This definition thereby extends consumer protections to both large and small businesses *  Examples include requirement for businesses to post license terms on Internet, no modification of terms without a “fresh” clickthrough (notice not sufficient), terms must be “reasonably comprehensible” by person of ordinary intelligence, choice of law and forum less likely to be upheld, easier for licensees to override disclaimers including by asserting express warranties, and ban on use of automated disablement

  21. Standard Form of Transfer • ITPEC position: • Businesses can negotiate for themselves and are not in need of heightened consumer protection • Consumers also act collectively to reject undesirable license terms • For example, in response to consumer criticism Facebook recently rolled back changes to its terms of use, and • Google recently narrowed the scope of its use of information obtained from consumers licensing its Chrome browser. • The Reporter agreed with the ITPEC to clarify that Principles do not apply to business to business ecommerce or ecommerce web sites such as Amazon where the primary purpose of the interaction is to enter transactions as opposed to licensing software.

  22. Section 2.02 Standard-Form Transfers of Generally Available Software; Enforcement of the Standard Form • The effect of the transfer not qualifying as a “standard-form transfer” is unclear • Clause (e) seems to imply that in such cases the agreement may not be enforceable. • Reporter said this was not necessarily the case and Section 2.01 (“Formation, Generally”) applies. 2.01, however, refers to contracts with one or more open terms

  23. Section 3.06 Disclaimer of Express and Implied Quality Warranties • Express and Implied Warranties addressed in Section 3.01 through 3.05 • Section 3.06 requires that all disclaimers be “conspicuous” • The comments explain that the location of the disclaimer “weighs heavily” and that disclaimers that are not displayed on the “one of the first few screens” will not be enforceable (page 203). • Implied Warranty of No Material Hidden Defects is not disclaimable. • Other implied warranties may be disclaimed by course of performance, course of dealing, or usage of trade • Consequential damages may not be limited for a breach of Implied Warranty of No Material Hidden Defects (Section 4.01)

  24. Conclusions • Principles represent a significant change in the law • A move from freedom of contract to “prescriptions” • Would require expensive changes to common practices of dubious benefit • Expand consumer type protection to commercial and retail transactions in a single industry • Would add uncertainty and increase litigation • Next steps

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