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Hugh Beale, Digital Content Directive And Rules For Contracts On Continuous Supply, 12 (2021) JIPITEC 96 para 1.
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%0 Journal Article %T Digital Content Directive And Rules For Contracts On Continuous Supply %A Beale, Hugh %J JIPITEC %D 2021 %V 12 %N 2 %@ 2190-3387 %F beale2021 %X This paper is in three parts. The first part gives a brief summary of the Digital Content Directive. The second part looks in more detail at longterm contracts for digital content or digital services, concentrating mainly on digital services but also considering contracts for digital content where there is to be “a series of individual acts of supply” and where the digital content is made available for a fixed period. It also considers “mixed” contracts under which digital services are to be supplied along with digital content and/or goods. The third and fourth parts look at gaps in the legislation from the points of view of consumers and then of traders, considering both issues that fall within the scope of the Directive yet nonetheless are left to Member States, and issues that are outside the scope of the Directive, and attempting to assess the extent to which these gaps may cause problems. The paper ends with a reminder that we need to consider also enforcement by public bodies and consumer organisations, which may have a particular importance in relation to the supply of digital content and services. %L 340 %K Consumer Remedies %K Digital content %K Digital services %K Enforcement by Public Bodies %K Gaps in Coverage %K Scope of Directive %K Trader’s obligations %U http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-29-52866 %P 96-110Download
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@Article{beale2021, author = "Beale, Hugh", title = "Digital Content Directive And Rules For Contracts On Continuous Supply", journal = "JIPITEC", year = "2021", volume = "12", number = "2", pages = "96--110", keywords = "Consumer Remedies; Digital content; Digital services; Enforcement by Public Bodies; Gaps in Coverage; Scope of Directive; Trader's obligations", abstract = "This paper is in three parts. The first part gives a brief summary of the Digital Content Directive. The second part looks in more detail at longterm contracts for digital content or digital services, concentrating mainly on digital services but also considering contracts for digital content where there is to be ``a series of individual acts of supply'' and where the digital content is made available for a fixed period. It also considers ``mixed'' contracts under which digital services are to be supplied along with digital content and/or goods. The third and fourth parts look at gaps in the legislation from the points of view of consumers and then of traders, considering both issues that fall within the scope of the Directive yet nonetheless are left to Member States, and issues that are outside the scope of the Directive, and attempting to assess the extent to which these gaps may cause problems. The paper ends with a reminder that we need to consider also enforcement by public bodies and consumer organisations, which may have a particular importance in relation to the supply of digital content and services.", issn = "2190-3387", url = "http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-29-52866" }Download
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TY - JOUR AU - Beale, Hugh PY - 2021 DA - 2021// TI - Digital Content Directive And Rules For Contracts On Continuous Supply JO - JIPITEC SP - 96 EP - 110 VL - 12 IS - 2 KW - Consumer Remedies KW - Digital content KW - Digital services KW - Enforcement by Public Bodies KW - Gaps in Coverage KW - Scope of Directive KW - Trader’s obligations AB - This paper is in three parts. The first part gives a brief summary of the Digital Content Directive. The second part looks in more detail at longterm contracts for digital content or digital services, concentrating mainly on digital services but also considering contracts for digital content where there is to be “a series of individual acts of supply” and where the digital content is made available for a fixed period. It also considers “mixed” contracts under which digital services are to be supplied along with digital content and/or goods. The third and fourth parts look at gaps in the legislation from the points of view of consumers and then of traders, considering both issues that fall within the scope of the Directive yet nonetheless are left to Member States, and issues that are outside the scope of the Directive, and attempting to assess the extent to which these gaps may cause problems. The paper ends with a reminder that we need to consider also enforcement by public bodies and consumer organisations, which may have a particular importance in relation to the supply of digital content and services. SN - 2190-3387 UR - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-29-52866 ID - beale2021 ER -Download
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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <b:Sources SelectedStyle="" xmlns:b="http://schemas.openxmlformats.org/officeDocument/2006/bibliography" xmlns="http://schemas.openxmlformats.org/officeDocument/2006/bibliography" > <b:Source> <b:Tag>beale2021</b:Tag> <b:SourceType>ArticleInAPeriodical</b:SourceType> <b:Year>2021</b:Year> <b:PeriodicalTitle>JIPITEC</b:PeriodicalTitle> <b:Volume>12</b:Volume> <b:Issue>2</b:Issue> <b:Url>http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-29-52866</b:Url> <b:Pages>96-110</b:Pages> <b:Author> <b:Author><b:NameList> <b:Person><b:Last>Beale</b:Last><b:First>Hugh</b:First></b:Person> </b:NameList></b:Author> </b:Author> <b:Title>Digital Content Directive And Rules For Contracts On Continuous Supply</b:Title> <b:Comments>This paper is in three parts. The first part gives a brief summary of the Digital Content Directive. The second part looks in more detail at longterm contracts for digital content or digital services, concentrating mainly on digital services but also considering contracts for digital content where there is to be “a series of individual acts of supply” and where the digital content is made available for a fixed period. It also considers “mixed” contracts under which digital services are to be supplied along with digital content and/or goods. The third and fourth parts look at gaps in the legislation from the points of view of consumers and then of traders, considering both issues that fall within the scope of the Directive yet nonetheless are left to Member States, and issues that are outside the scope of the Directive, and attempting to assess the extent to which these gaps may cause problems. The paper ends with a reminder that we need to consider also enforcement by public bodies and consumer organisations, which may have a particular importance in relation to the supply of digital content and services.</b:Comments> </b:Source> </b:Sources>Download
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PT Journal AU Beale, H TI Digital Content Directive And Rules For Contracts On Continuous Supply SO JIPITEC PY 2021 BP 96 EP 110 VL 12 IS 2 DE Consumer Remedies; Digital content; Digital services; Enforcement by Public Bodies; Gaps in Coverage; Scope of Directive; Trader’s obligations AB This paper is in three parts. The first part gives a brief summary of the Digital Content Directive. The second part looks in more detail at longterm contracts for digital content or digital services, concentrating mainly on digital services but also considering contracts for digital content where there is to be “a series of individual acts of supply” and where the digital content is made available for a fixed period. It also considers “mixed” contracts under which digital services are to be supplied along with digital content and/or goods. The third and fourth parts look at gaps in the legislation from the points of view of consumers and then of traders, considering both issues that fall within the scope of the Directive yet nonetheless are left to Member States, and issues that are outside the scope of the Directive, and attempting to assess the extent to which these gaps may cause problems. The paper ends with a reminder that we need to consider also enforcement by public bodies and consumer organisations, which may have a particular importance in relation to the supply of digital content and services. ERDownload
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<mods> <titleInfo> <title>Digital Content Directive And Rules For Contracts On Continuous Supply</title> </titleInfo> <name type="personal"> <namePart type="family">Beale</namePart> <namePart type="given">Hugh</namePart> </name> <abstract>This paper is in three parts. The first part gives a brief summary of the Digital Content Directive. The second part looks in more detail at longterm contracts for digital content or digital services, concentrating mainly on digital services but also considering contracts for digital content where there is to be “a series of individual acts of supply” and where the digital content is made available for a fixed period. It also considers “mixed” contracts under which digital services are to be supplied along with digital content and/or goods. The third and fourth parts look at gaps in the legislation from the points of view of consumers and then of traders, considering both issues that fall within the scope of the Directive yet nonetheless are left to Member States, and issues that are outside the scope of the Directive, and attempting to assess the extent to which these gaps may cause problems. The paper ends with a reminder that we need to consider also enforcement by public bodies and consumer organisations, which may have a particular importance in relation to the supply of digital content and services.</abstract> <subject> <topic>Consumer Remedies</topic> <topic>Digital content</topic> <topic>Digital services</topic> <topic>Enforcement by Public Bodies</topic> <topic>Gaps in Coverage</topic> <topic>Scope of Directive</topic> <topic>Trader’s obligations</topic> </subject> <classification authority="ddc">340</classification> <relatedItem type="host"> <genre authority="marcgt">periodical</genre> <genre>academic journal</genre> <titleInfo> <title>JIPITEC</title> </titleInfo> <part> <detail type="volume"> <number>12</number> </detail> <detail type="issue"> <number>2</number> </detail> <date>2021</date> <extent unit="page"> <start>96</start> <end>110</end> </extent> </part> </relatedItem> <identifier type="issn">2190-3387</identifier> <identifier type="urn">urn:nbn:de:0009-29-52866</identifier> <identifier type="uri">http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-29-52866</identifier> <identifier type="citekey">beale2021</identifier> </mods>Download
Full Metadata
Bibliographic Citation | Journal of intellectual property, information technology and electronic commerce law 12 (2021) 2 |
---|---|
Title |
Digital Content Directive And Rules For Contracts On Continuous Supply (eng) |
Author | Hugh Beale |
Language | eng |
Abstract | This paper is in three parts. The first part gives a brief summary of the Digital Content Directive. The second part looks in more detail at longterm contracts for digital content or digital services, concentrating mainly on digital services but also considering contracts for digital content where there is to be “a series of individual acts of supply” and where the digital content is made available for a fixed period. It also considers “mixed” contracts under which digital services are to be supplied along with digital content and/or goods. The third and fourth parts look at gaps in the legislation from the points of view of consumers and then of traders, considering both issues that fall within the scope of the Directive yet nonetheless are left to Member States, and issues that are outside the scope of the Directive, and attempting to assess the extent to which these gaps may cause problems. The paper ends with a reminder that we need to consider also enforcement by public bodies and consumer organisations, which may have a particular importance in relation to the supply of digital content and services. |
Subject | Consumer Remedies, Digital content, Digital services, Enforcement by Public Bodies, Gaps in Coverage, Scope of Directive, Trader’s obligations |
DDC | 340 |
Rights | DPPL |
URN: | urn:nbn:de:0009-29-52866 |