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This is the only product that I know that a consumer must agree to something that only lawyer can (something) understand. I'm sure car accidents kill more people each year than software accidents. But I don't sign anything like an EULA when I buy a car.

So why does software have EULA? Were there a bad accident that triggered the need for software companies to protect themselves? (and what was the first software that had EULA?)

[Update] Just to clear my point: I don't understand why software have EULA. No other product that I can think of does (not even gun)! So what makes software different that this product needs some sort of "liability limitations"?

By the way, Wikipedia says that "The legal status of shrink-wrap licenses in the US is somewhat unclear."

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Why you don't work without a contract? – Mehrdad Afshari Feb 28 at 19:03
I think this is a valid question. Many people do read their EULA, but there may be a lot of weird legal stuff in there, which may be cause for concern. And on top of that, people are going to use stuff in the way they want, so what is the real point of an EULA? – HyperCas Feb 28 at 19:08
note: you don't need to be licensed to own and operate a computer. – SnOrfus Feb 28 at 19:18
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Regarding the Wikipedia quote: In some countries outside the US, an EULA that is only displayed to the user after he purchased the software (license) is considered not be legally binding. Not sure how this plays out in the US, though. – Treb Mar 2 at 9:22

9 Answers

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The difference is that you are purchasing a license to use software, not the software itself (which the software company still owns). The EULA stipulates the method with which you can use the software. Similar agreements are in place when you rent things (e.g. a home), lease equipment, etc.

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It depends on the exact wording of the EULA. Often, it's written to reinforce existing laws, such as copyright, by directly informing the user that it's unlawful to copy the program. It also adds on other restrictions such as no reverse engineering, restricting the intellectual property.

Additional clauses may include "not to be used in nuclear projects" or similar. This is merely covering the developer's bases, as it is extremely unlikely that a nuclear system developer would use a non-realtime, non-approved system without extreme amounts of research.

A further clause could restrict certain classes of users, such as military or government, which the developer feels strongly against.

As for which software had the first EULA, I have no idea.

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If a consumer receives software without any license, consider what they might consider their rights:

  • They may believe they can copy the software, as many times as they want.
  • They may consider re-selling the software, and still keeping a copy for them self.
  • They may believe the software must work perfectly, with zero bugs (as they understand a bug)
  • They may believe it is fully waranteed against any perceived defect, and try to return it, for a full refund, at any point in the future.

In short, the EULA disabuses consumers of these notions. It defines ownership and copyright of the software, limits on its use, distribution, features, and quality.

Now it is true that as lawyers get involved in the EULAs more and more, stranger and stranger provisions creep in, such as provisions that you cannot review the software on a blog, or you cannot bad-mouth the software to the press, or that the publisher owns content created with the software.

But fundamentally, the EULA is supposed to be about the producer and the consumer coming to an understanding of what is, and is not, an acceptable use of the software.

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The consumer can copy the software as many times as they want. The consumer bought it; they can resell it. These two "restrictions" are NOT supported by current copyright law. However, software vendors want them, and we want their software. So we agree. – S.Lott Feb 28 at 19:25
How do you reconcile that with LuckyLindy's answer? – David Feb 28 at 21:41
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@S.Lott: Although IANAL, I disagree. Copyright is exactly that: the right-to-copy, which belongs solely to the author. The consumer has no right to copy or re-license software. The EULA clearly spells out what is already in law, in this regard. – abelenky Feb 28 at 22:00
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There are basically three reasons for EULAs:

  1. Software is much more copyable than any other product I can think of. It is almost never left on its distribution medium. That creates a huge temptation to, for example, buy one copy of Windows and install it on all of a company's thousand computers. Developers want to explicitly lay out how many computers the software may be installed on.
  2. Software often has undetected problems. Even the best QA department never finds all the bugs in a software product. Developers know this and want to be legally covered.
  3. Software can often be easy to take apart to discover a developer's trade secrets or other information the developer doesn't want others to know. Developers want to legally restrict this to protect their advantage over competitors.

Of course, there are sometimes other reasons for other terms. EULAs for Apple's Mac applications, for example, usually state that you can only install the software on an Apple-branded computer; this ensures that Apple's software (which is usually sold much cheaper than it would be from any other developer) increases sales of Apple hardware. The GNU GPL tries to ensure that the innovations in derivative software remain available to the community that developed the original. There are as many reasons as there are clauses.

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I believe the GPL is actually not an EULA, technically speaking. The GPL conditionally grants rights which would ordinarily be forbidden by copyright law, whereas an EULA places additional restrictions above and beyond copyright law. But I'm not a lawyer ;-) – David Feb 28 at 21:44
It's actually the other way around. A license is a document granting rights you ordinarily wouldn't have. So the GPL is a license, but most EULAs are actually not; they're contracts. – Brent Royal-Gordon Mar 1 at 13:47
@Brent - EULA = End-User License Agreement. Your definition of license is incomplete. There are plenty of licenses that grant right only in exchange for normal rights denied. – jmucchiello Jul 5 at 4:06
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Cars and guns technically have something like a EULA... we just call them "licenses". You have to learn the limitations and rules of their operation, then take some tests and sign some papers.

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Why was this down-voted exactly? – gnovice Feb 28 at 19:22
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Nobody has mentioned the obligations of the provider, which are often in the EULA too. If I make your software a critical piece of my corporate infrastructure and you go bust I want to be able to get my hands on the code so your failure doesn't precipitate mine.

As someone said, this is more akin to a rental agreement than a purchase agreement, which is why the analogy with a gun does not really apply.

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For proprietary software, License tells about your right to use specific software copy and impossibility to re-sell it, also your and software authors rights and charges

For open source software, License also tells about your right and charge about source code (distribute, do not do that, do that with limitations)

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Actually, what is quite funny, in Germany EULAs are pretty much legally-non binding, since you only get to see them after the purchase, so for us the answer to your question is: To intimidate the user from doing stuff the company does not want

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Do companies get around this by making those who purchase software (particularly online) accept a similar agreement prior to purchase? – LuckyLindy Mar 1 at 6:09
Pretty much everything is handled exactly like it would be in the US, but retail packages who give you an EULA to accept after purchase are not legally binding, which in practice is pretty unimportant though, since a EULA that just reinforces the copyright is useless anyway. – dionadar Mar 1 at 18:02
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When you use a gun at a firing range, don't you have to sign some type of release or waiver? The logic is similar.

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