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I need a display advertising contract for a website, I'm sure there is generic contracts out there than you can just stick in publisher and advertiser names and get two signatures on the bottom.

Why should I pay a solicitor/lawyer to draw up a new contract when its such an established model?

Should I just word process another websites agreement?

am looking UK based stuff, i know its not programming related but am sure many people of SO have come across it before

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Get a lawyer before a lawyer gets you. – Will Sep 14 at 15:08
Bootstrapping a startup, im trying to keep every cost to a minimum. Why cant you just pull a contract of the internet.. much like using GPL for your software if im going to sell advertising real estate on my website – chris Sep 14 at 15:56
Because unless it states otherwise, anything on the Internet is copyrighted, and that means you're not allowed to copy it without permission. Check out mobrule's link further down, but I think you're thinking about this the wrong way. An air-tight contract drawn up by a lawyer that you're paying for, will save you in the long run. – Randolph Potter Sep 14 at 16:43
i have come up with netlawman.co.uk/nlm/… seems pretty Ok for my purposes, would prefer a free one – chris Sep 14 at 18:51

closed as not programming related by EBGreen, Ilya Kochetov, David, Piskvor, Shog9 Sep 16 at 14:30

3 Answers

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It depends.

Who is your target market? Do you have any private data you're storing? Will you be facing EU regulations as well as just the UK?

I think you'll probably need legal advice anyway, because as far as word-processing someone else's agreement, that's copyright theft right there.

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http://www.nolo.com/ is a great resource for things like this. It is U.S.-centric and most of the good stuff isn't free (though still cheaper than a solicitor), but I'll bet you could find some useful advice there.

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You need a solicitor/lawyer simply because you yourself are no expert at legal issues. Actually, even lawyers aren't always aware of all legal issues but when you do something wrong, at least you could blame the lawyet in that case.

If you just use someone else's agreement then that would be a copyright violation! Definitely don't do this, unless the agreement itself is part of the public domain!

You can use many of the free/open source/Creative Commons/Public Domain/GPL licenses in case you're creating or using open-source software. (For example, PHP on Apache with Linux and MySQL.) But if you want to create a commercial website, better contact a legal expert first, who has good experiences with the Internet!

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