Scott Peppet, ‘Freedom of Contract in an Augmented Reality: The Case of Consumer Contracts’

Abstract:
This Article argues that freedom of contract will take on different meaning in a world in which ubiquitous information about places, goods, people, firms and contract terms is available to contracting parties anywhere, any time. In particular, our increasingly “augmented reality” calls into question leading justifications for distrusting consumer contracts – and thereby strengthens traditional understandings of freedom of contract as enforcing contracts as written. This is largely a descriptive and predictive argument: the Article aims to introduce contract law to these technologies and consider their most likely effects. It certainly has normative implications, however. Given that the vast majority of consumer contracting occurs in physical space, the introduction of ubiquitous digital information into these transactions has profound consequences for contract law.

Peppet, Scott R., Freedom of Contract in an Augmented Reality: The Case of Consumer Contracts (August, 29 2011). UCLA Law Review, 2012; U of Colorado Law Legal Studies Research Paper No. 11-14.

First posted 2011-09-03 13:35:49

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