The following text is
copyright 2003 by Network World, permission is hearby given for reproduction,
as long as attribution is given and this notice is included.
Discussing crap
By Scott Bradner
Network Associates thought they could override the U.S. Constitution by the use of a shrink-wrap license. Recently a New York State court told them otherwise. The decision itself is potentially important in what it says, but it may be more important in what it may imply.
Network Associates is not the only software company that has
tried to keep people from saying just what they thought of the companies
products, its just the first to get sued over trying to do so. Network Associates has included two
clauses in the license for its products that said:
"b. The customer shall not
disclose the result of any benchmark test to any third party without Network
Associates' prior written approval.
c. The
customer will not publish reviews of this product without prior consent from
Network Associates, Inc."
The
court said that including the clauses was deceptive because such clauses could
never legally be enforced yet Network Associates implied that it was a legal
restriction by including them in the license. The court has asked for sales records for all products that
included this clause so that the court can figure out what fine Network
Associates should have to pay.
Network
Associates claimed that they did not mean what they clearly said, they claimed
that they just wanted to be sure that people were reviewing current versions of
the products. But the court did
not buy that request to ignore the plain meaning of the text. Network Associates has since changed
the language, at least on their web site, to be more in line with what they
claimed was their purpose all along.
(https://secure.nai.com/forms/registration/agreement.asp?GovRes=False)
These
types of restrictions are not new but seemed to be getting more common. The only possible explanation for them
was to keep you from saying that a product was crap if your experience was that
it was crap. That restriction may
be good for a vendor of crappy software but not for anyone else. I hope that the court's decision is
upheld after the appeal that Network Associates says they are going to file --
I wonder if Network Associates has some underlying software quality reason to
keep people from saying what they think.
But
the main importance of the decision may have nothing specifically to do with
the restriction of free speech. Ken
Dreifach, chief of the Internet bureau of the office of the New York State
attorney general, noted that:
"The decision "raises the issue of whether these types of
clauses — whether they restrict use, resale or the right to criticize
— are enforceable,"
There
are lots of clauses in software, and technology being added to products to
restrict the right of the purchaser to use or resell the products they buy. One
example is the copy protection in some music CDs that restrict the user's
ability to play the music on their PCs or to sell it to a friend in some other
part of the world. Another is the
restrictions on loaning, leasing or reselling that a number of software
vendors, including Network Associates, put on their software products. Maybe Network Associates will be back
in court again soon.
disclaimer: I did not ask the Harvard Law School, sort of a legal arms merchant, trained the New York state attorney general and likely some the lawyers on the other side, their opinion on this case -- its all mine.