Account

Sign in to access your account and subscription

LJN Newsletters

  • UCITA was drafted as a revision to the UCC ' a body of law adopted in almost every U.S. state that aims to ensure consistency in rules governing contract laws. After losing the support of the American Law Institute, the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws adopted the proposed new article as a freestanding uniform act (UCITA), rather than as a new article to the UCC, and proposed the uniform law be passed in all 50 states.

    August 20, 2003Marie Flores
  • Earlier this year, a New York trial judge issued the first written opinion on the meaning of the terms permission based and opt-in in the context of e-mail marketing.

    August 20, 2003D. Reed Freeman Jr.
  • The Small Webcaster Settlement Act (Pub.L. 107-321) became law in December. It provides for alternative royalty-rate setting among certain small and noncommercial Webcasters by agreement with receiving agent designated by the copyright office to accept royalty payments for works covered by sound recording copyrights.

    August 19, 2003ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |
  • The wild wild Web is getting tamed. Cybersquatters no longer freely roam its highways looking for easy marks and trademark owners who once went after anyone who crossed their path are now choosing their battles much more carefully.

    August 19, 2003Tamara Loomis
  • A notice accompanying packaged and downloadable software purporting to restrict purchasers from publishing product reviews or disclosing benchmark test results without seller's permission is unenforceable and may be sanctionable under New York law prohibiting deceptive business acts and practices (People v. Network Associates Inc., No. 400590/02, N.Y. Sup. Ct. N.Y. Cty. Jan. 14, 2003).

    August 19, 2003ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |
  • Software license agreements can appear deceptively easy to draft, particularly in an age when form contracts are readily available. The danger, however, lies in overlooking subtleties that truly define parties' contractual intentions and obligations. If the licensee will be paying for custom software or modifications to pre-existing software, then warranties will play a particularly important role.

    August 19, 2003Marie Flores
  • Recent developments of interest to corporate counsel.

    August 19, 2003ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |
  • When prospective purchasers of businesses don't perform a thorough due diligence on the sellers, the result can be unneeded and protracted litigation. Due diligence should include investigation into trade secrets, other potential purchasers, covenants not to compete, seller's liabilities and insurance coverage. The purchaser should consider all 'what ifs' including claims and remedies during the due diligence period. What if the seller defaults? What if the seller breaches the representations and warranties? What if the seller violates the covenant not to compete? What if the seller discloses or has already disclosed to others acquired trade secret information? Paying too much too early to a seller without substantial assets or sufficient holdbacks are red flags. In the event of a seller's breach and purchaser's lawsuit, any resulting judgment may be uncollectible.

    August 19, 2003Gary A. Wexler