University of New South Wales Faculty of Law Research Series

University of New South Wales Faculty of Law Research Series 2009

 

The Boundaries of Contract Law in Cyberspace

Leon Trakman, University of New South Wales

Article comments

This article was published in Revue de droit des Affaires Internationales (RDAI) / International Business Law Journal / (IBLJ), N° 2, 2009 by Sweet & Maxwell. This paper may also be referenced as [2009] UNSWLRS 13.

Abstract

This article evaluates the extent to which the traditional policy of deterrence that regulators and courts historically applied to so-called adhesion contracts are extended to “new” classes of 21st century cyber-consumers in our consumer-centric era. Concentrating on the law of unconscionability in jurisdictions like California and New York, it considers how courts treat cyber-consumers who resell goods and services, engage in repeat order transactions, and exercise market choice. Exploring the judicial treatment of unconscionability in box-wrap, shrink-wrap, click-wrap17 and browse-wrap18 contracts, not limited to cyber-commerce, it explores judicial conceptions of “bargaining naughtiness” leading to procedural unconscionable, and “evils lurking” in “wrap” contracts giving rise to substantive unconscionability. It juxtaposes the view that “wrap” producers purposefully deny cyber-consumers the opportunity to review onerous conditions against the reality that many consumers choose not to read the fine print because it is uneconomic for them to do so.

Subject Area

Consumer Protection Law, Contracts

Recommended Citation

Leon Trakman, "The Boundaries of Contract Law in Cyberspace" (April 2009). University of New South Wales Faculty of Law Research Series. University of New South Wales Faculty of Law Research Series 2009. Working Paper 13.
http://law.bepress.com/unswwps/flrps09/art13

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