Cross-border contracting for consumer software in the Philippines: Addressing foreign ownership limitations and consumer protection issues
College
Ramon V. Del Rosario College of Business
Department/Unit
Commercial Law
Document Type
Article
Source Title
Journal of International and Comparative Law
Volume
6
Issue
1
First Page
153
Last Page
169
Publication Date
10-2019
Physical Description
17 pages
Abstract
Two major legal issues make the cross-border supply of online consumer software in the Philippines problematic: (1) the erroneous regulatory interpretation that online software contracting is a mass media activity and therefore is governed by the Constitutional requirement that the ownership and management of mass media must be limited to citizens of the Philippines or corporations, cooperative or associations, wholly owned and managed by such persons; and (2) the failure of the confl ict of laws system to provide any statutory consumer guarantees. Both of these issues must be addressed to ensure that unrestricted cross-border sale of online consumer software does not leave local consumers unprotected. This article proposes that consumer software contracting must be distinguished from traditional mass media activities based on their functional differences. This article argues that Philippine law must provide statutory consumer guarantees by considering the legislative approach in the Australian Consumer Law and the judicial approach in the Valve decisions.
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Recommended Citation
Razon, A. A. (2019). Cross-border contracting for consumer software in the Philippines: Addressing foreign ownership limitations and consumer protection issues. Journal of International and Comparative Law, 6 (1), 153-169. Retrieved from https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/11349
Disciplines
Consumer Protection Law
Keywords
Conflict of laws—Consumer protection—Philippines; Consumer protection—Philippines; Computer sofware industry—Philippines—Foreign ownership
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