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UCITA group backs off provision in software licensing law -- somewhat

Patrick Thibodeau   Today’s Top Stories   or  Other Software Stories  
 

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August 9, 2000 (Computerworld) -- The group that drafted the Uniform Computer Information Transaction Act (UCITA) has backed off slightly from one of the more controversial measures in the proposed software-licensing law -- a so-called self-help provision that allows vendors to remotely disable the software they sell to users. But that may not be much solace to corporate users.

At its annual meeting, which ended last Friday, the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws (NCCUSL) agreed to end the self-help provision for mass-market software sold via retail channels. However, the provision remains in effect for other types of software such as customizable applications that are purchased by companies.

Software vendors could take advantage of the self-help capabilities allowed by UCITA to cut off users who they claim haven't paid their license fees or who allegedly have violated their contracts in other ways, such as by having more end users than their licenses allow. That's one of the reasons opponents have claimed the draft law gives too much power to vendors at the expense of their customers.

Carlyle Ring, a former general counsel at Atlantic Research Corp. in Gainesville, Fla., who heads the UCITA drafting committee, said the prohibition of self-help actions by vendors of mass-market software was originally included in a version of the licensing law approved by the state of Maryland in April (see story). Officials attending last week's conference "thought that it was a change that alleviated some measure of concern" for users, Ring added.

UCITA, which was sent to the legislatures of all U.S. states and territories for their consideration in July 1999, seeks to bring a set of consistent rules to software contracts and licensing agreements. But it has been plagued by controversy almost since the NCCUSL, a Chicago-based organization with representatives from all 50 states, first began drafting the law back in 1996.

Maryland and Virginia are the only two states that have adopted UCITA thus far. The law has drawn considerable opposition from corporate CIOs, who are particularly worried that the self-help provision will pose security risks to their systems and give software vendors the upper hand in licensing negotiations.

Cem Kaner, an attorney and a computer science professor at the Florida Institute of Technology in Melbourne, Fla., said the change made to UCITA last week is "insignificant" for corporate users.

Although consumers would be exempt from the self-help provision, a company that buys a large quantity of off-the-shelf software likely wouldn't fall under the definition of mass market, he said. In addition, any applications purchased via a site license wouldn't be free and clear of the provision, nor would virus updates and other software products bought

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