Comment Re:EULA and the solution (Score 1) 322
I'm not a lawyer but having been involved in many software contract negotiations I understand that the "Click to accept" on a EULA screen has not actually been legally tested.
In otherwords no software vendor has taken someone to court and used the fact that they clicked on an "accept" button as evidence that they have in fact accepted the terms.
The implication of this is that just because you click the "Accept" button does not actually mean that you are necessarily legally accepting the terms (please don't take my word on this though). This is not to say that you shouldn't read the terms, if for no other reason than it might describe some unexpected behaviour of the software.
The implication of this is that just because you click the "Accept" button does not actually mean that you are necessarily legally accepting the terms (please don't take my word on this though). This is not to say that you shouldn't read the terms, if for no other reason than it might describe some unexpected behaviour of the software.