AOL Needs To Pay For Damaging Computers

from the trying-to-pass-the-buck dept

Back when AOL 5.0 came out, there was a big fuss over the fact that it was frying some users' computers. AOL eventually reached a settlement with a bunch of users who were suing and then sent the bill to their insurance company, figuring that's what they paid the insurance company for. The insurance company said no way, so that case had to go to court. The three judge panel has now decided that the insurance policy doesn't cover writing bad software that fouls up users' machines, and it's AOL's responsibility to pay.

Reader Comments (rss)

(Flattened / Threaded)

  1. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, Oct 16th, 2003 @ 6:47am

    No Subject Given

    Does this imply that if a company releases a 'faulty' patch which disables your machine that you can sue them ?

    reply to this | link to this | view in thread ]

  2. identicon
    Dave, Oct 16th, 2003 @ 7:15am

    A great precedent to set!

    Great, so now developers have to worry about being sued if they accidently update a system file on the users computer!

    Isn't there a legal note, maybe part of the EULA, that says that the company is not responsible for any errors in the program?

    Expect software prices to skyrocket thanks to this ruling!

    reply to this | link to this | view in thread ]

  3. identicon
    Jason Robson, Oct 16th, 2003 @ 8:21am

    Re: A great precedent to set!

    When you buy a car, isn't there a legal note, maybe part of the contract papers, that says that the company is not responsible for any defects in the car?
    Yeah, right. Give me an effing break!

    reply to this | link to this | view in thread ]

  4. identicon
    Rick Colosimo, Oct 16th, 2003 @ 8:48am

    Re: A great precedent to set!

    1. The story refers to insurance coverage of the software defect, not any underlying liability to the end-user.

    2. Non-physical, purely economic harm, e.g., a crash that corrupts your data, is something that you're supposed to be able to negotiate on your own as a contract matter without needing the state to protect you.

    3. Physical harm to a person is something that you're not allowed to negotiate away, and companies can't get out of that sort of liability no matter what they put in a contract. This is one reason why if you do read an EULA every now and then, you will see a reference to the software not being suitable for truly critical systems, e.g., nuclear facilities, heart monitors, etc.

    reply to this | link to this | view in thread ]


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