Ok I have an version of this, if this is an education to teach reading for 
dyslexics 8 years and above how do we handle the EULA can the school teacher 
agree for the student as you can not ask an student who can not read to agree 
to the EULA

Any ideas

Sent from my iPhone

> On 15 Nov 2013, at 19:42, "Kessler CTR Mark J" <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
>
>    Well the US DoD requires their centrally managed/hosted 
> websites/web-applications to have a Notice and Consent banner before using 
> them.  So I suppose it depends your environment.  IMO in general since the 
> web-apps do not install, no EULA is required.  The license for the flash 
> player was already agreed to when it was installed by itself.
>
>
> -Mark
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
> Sent: Friday, November 15, 2013 2:14 PM
> To: apache flex users
> Subject: EULA or SaaS agreement for Flex browser-based (e.g. plug-in; not 
> AIR) app?
>
> I'm not seeking legal advice, just a little conventional wisdom perhaps.
>
> I'm trying to understand whether a traditional Flex enterprise app requires 
> an end-user-license agreement (EULA) or a software-as-a-service (SaaS) 
> agreement. This website,
>
> http://techcontracts.com/2011/09/12/dont-use-license-agreements-for-software-as-a-service/
>
> states:
>
>
> "If the customer puts a copy of a software application on a 
> computer—downloads it, installs it from a disk, etc.—the deal calls for a 
> license (e.g. EULA). Copyright law gives the software’s owner a monopoly over 
> the right to copy it (to “reproduce” it), so the customer needs a copyright 
> license to make a copy and put it on a computer. But in a SaaS deal, the 
> customer doesn’t put software on a computer, or copy it at all. The software 
> sits on the vendor’s computer and the customer merely accesses it via the 
> Internet. With no copies, copyright plays no role in the transaction, so the 
> customer doesn’t need a copyright license. Rather, the customer needs a 
> simple promise: “During the term of this Agreement, Vendor will provide the 
> System to Customer.”
>
> In other words, the customer gets a service in a SaaS deal, not software. The 
> vendor just uses software to provide the service. The vendor operates like an 
> Internet service provider (ISP). Earthlink and Comcast and other ISP’s use 
> millions of dollars of software to give their customers Internet access. But 
> they don’t give their customers copies of that software. Rather, they provide 
> a subscription to the service made possible by that software."
>
> I can understand AIR applications fall into the EULA agreement since they are 
> "installed" on the client. But what about browser-based apps using the FP 
> plugin? On one hand, the software runs in the browser and is is not installed 
> (at least not traditionally installed, e.g. as stand alone software); on the 
> other hand, unless the software accesses a backend, the software resides in 
> cache and runs completely on the client computer (no internet connection 
> required after it loads).
>
> I can see it both ways. Anyone go through this before and can shed some light 
> on it?

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