Posted by Randy Barnett:
Intellectual Property Meets Contract Law
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2005_06_12-2005_06_18.shtml#1118858650


   The next session is Intellectual Property (IP) Meets Contract Law. It
   is being chaired by Jean Braucher (Arizona). She explains that part of
   the issue is whether IP merely provides default rules that can be
   contracted around by entering into contracts. The concept of �default
   rules� is very basic to understanding contract law. The speakers are
   Peggy Radin (Stanford), Maureen O�Rourke (Interim Dean of BU), and
   Mark Lemley.
   Peggy Radin is going first. She says she now teaches contracts after
   she realized that people could contract around all the meticulously
   negotiated intellectual property rules by such practices as clickwrap
   and browsewrap agreements. She asks whether contract law should be
   considered preempted by federal IP law. She is now insisting on the
   distinction between the �public� law (which sets original
   entitlements) and �private� law of contracts that rearranges the
   background property rights, in this case intellectual property rights.
   Peggy has written seminal work on inalienability of rights, and she is
   now wondering whether the power to contract around background IP
   entitlements should be limited. . . . [to view the rest of this post
   click on show]

   ([1]show)

   My battery gave out on my laptop, so I had to switch to my Treo but I
   left the keyboard in my room. So I missed much of what Peggy had to
   say. Darn it! need to buy a new battery, but as I cannot access the
   wireless network in the meeting room, in the future it is just as easy
   to compose this on my Treo using the keyboard.
   I got back in time to hear Mark Lemley (also of Stanford). Mark begins
   by noting how Microsoft imposes what amounts to a speech code on those
   who use its web building software and reports other examples of
   amazing terms included in software browsewrap "agreements." This
   includes spyware licenses restricting your right to remove it. His
   point is that when consent is eliminated, fantasically one-sided terms
   can result, contrary to what he says was the suggestion of Clay
   Gillette. The issue is when there should be restrictions on the
   ability to enforce such terms. (I have written about and endorsed such
   limits in the form contract context [2]here.)
   Mark's discussion of "preemption" of contracts by federal IP law is a
   bit too technical to summarize here. He basically says that sometimes
   the courts find that IP law preempts contracts and other times they
   not. The issue is how strong is the intellectual property policy.
   Mark suggests that, rather than focusing on how important is the IP
   policy, we could also ask how much of a contract is there? Is this a
   browsewrap in which consent is really fictitious, or is it a
   specifically negotiated agreemments? The more the contract is really
   negotiated and agreed to, the more receptive we may be to allowing it
   to supercede the background IP rule. The more it looks imposed by one
   party on another without even a hint of assent, the less willing we
   should be to allow contracting around the IP. We should consider
   contracts on a sliding scale between these extremes.
   Given a proper antipathy to browsewrap agreements, this sounds
   reasonable, but perhaps this is because there is no real assent at
   all. But when we talk about other form contracts to which you do need
   to indicate your assent (even if you do not read the terrms) I wonder
   which side of the line these would fall. Mark does not say, but I'll
   bet he has an opinion.
   Next up is my boss�I mean my Dean�Maureen O'Rourke. She is discussing
   how the American Law Institute treats software, and the licenses that
   you agree to when using it. Is there a need for separate rules
   governing software or can it be handled by general contract law. She
   is the assistant reporter for the ALI project developing "principles."
   She is listing the questions they are addressing.
   She is now discussing contract preemption again, and she agrees with
   Mark that you need a sliding scale depending on the nature of the
   contractual assent. She founds that the idea of contracts trumping IP
   law is much weaker with browsewrap agreements where consent is largely
   fictional. But what about click-wrap agreements with formal consent?
   She too does not address it, though she does refer pejoratively to
   "boilerplate" form contracts. Because such forms operate "against the
   world" they looks more like legislation than contracts and it is more
   troubling to allow these sorts of contracts to vary the rights
   provided by IP.
   She closes by discussing the restrictive terms that define "open
   source" agreements. Although "open" they still provide restrictions on
   use that differ from the background IP regime.
   I asked the panel from the floor about whether the proposal is really
   a "sliding scale" in which completely negotiated contracts are at one
   end of the scale and browsewrap with no indication of consent is on
   the other. Do they really think that click wrap and other form
   contracts where there is a manifestation of assent to an unread form
   supplied by one party should get some middling treatment. Or is it
   really a dichotomy and we need to decide whether click wraps are one
   side of the line or the other. In my article on form contract I do
   think that form contracts like �click� agreements should fall into a
   middle category in which, what Todd Rakoff called, "visible" terms
   (which it is rational to read) get enforced as a matter of course and
   "invisible" terms (about which it is rational to remain ignorant) only
   get enforced when they are not a surprise. (See my article [3]here.)
   Mark said he really does think there should be a sliding scale, rather
   than a dichotomy, but he did not address what middle treatment the
   middle types of agreements should receive.
   Alan Schwartz of Yale asks the next (and last) question. He asks
   whether is any preemption at all. The issue is whether private acts
   are permitted under copyright laws. If so, then state contract law
   applies. His questions flummoxes the panel, I think, because he is
   using the term "preemption" in a more technical sense than are the
   panelists who are using "preemption" to refer to private contracts, as
   opposed to the state law of contracts. Mark thinks it really is a
   preemption issue because the question in whether you can go to (state)
   courts to enforce your private agreements that federal law says cannot
   be enforced. The hard part is figuring out what federal law really
   prohibits.
   I am posting this after lunch and the next session begins in a few
   minutes. So I have to run.
   ([4]hide)

References

   1. file://localhost/var/www/powerblogs/volokh/posts/1118858650.html
   2. http://www.randybarnett.com/pdf/consenting.pdf
   3. http://www.randybarnett.com/pdf/consenting.pdf
   4. file://localhost/var/www/powerblogs/volokh/posts/1118858650.html

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