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Chapter 17 describes the evolution of online licenses and the understanding of their legal enforceability beginning with physical shrinkwrap agreements (ProCD v. Zeidenberg) and the classic battle of the forms (MA Mortenson v. Timberline). It then proceeds to click-through and browsewrap agreements (Specht v. Netscape) and concludes with a discussion of the future of consumer online agreements.
Unlike privacy law discourse, which has primarily explored questions related to others’ knowledge, access, and use of information about us, commercial law’s central focus has been on issues related to trade involving persons, merchants, and entities. In the commercial law context, questions about knowledge and information are primarily connected to the exchange and disclosure of information needed to facilitate transactions between parties.1 This distinct historical focus has likely contributed to commercial law’s failure to adequately account for and address privacy, security, and digital domination harms. In some cases, commercial law also defers to corporate commercial practices as well.
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