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2.nd IFTTA Europe Workshop

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Title: 2.nd IFTTA Europe Workshop


1
2.nd IFTTA Europe Workshop Tourism
and New Technologies A New Age for Travel Law?
Protecting Travellers While Dealing with
(Software) Agents
  • Manuel David Masseno
  • Palma de Mallorca, April 2.nd 2009

2
Protecting Travellers While Dealing with
(Software) Agents
  • Current European Legal Framework
  • Directive 2000/31/EC of the European Parliament
    and of the Council of 8 June 2000 on certain
    legal aspects of information society services, in
    particular electronic commerce, in the Internal
    Market ('Directive on electronic commerce')
  • Directive 97/7/EC of the European Parliament and
    of the Council of 20 May 1997 on the protection
    of consumers in respect of distance contracts
  • Council Directive 90/314/EEC of 13 June 1990 on
    package travel, package holidays and package
    tours
  • With a common background
  • Council Directive 93/13/EEC of 5 April 1993 on
    unfair terms in consumer contracts

3
Protecting Travellers While Dealing with
(Software) Agents
  • Regarding consumer contracts, the 'Directive on
    electronic commerce relies on Interactive
    Contracting
  • Also in this context, Law is regarded as a
    technical device designed to accelerate and
    provide stability for Business practices (as in
    order or negotiable instruments and, mostly, in
    adhesion contracts and vending machines),
    therefore
  • these rules shall not apply to individually
    negotiated terms (Art. 11.3)
  • being assumed that we are always before standard
    form contracts (Art. 10.3)

4
Protecting Travellers While Dealing with
(Software) Agents
  • Therefore, we need to focus on the European
    regulations regarding standard form contracts
    (Council Directive 93/13/EEC of 5 April 1993 on
    unfair terms in consumer contracts)
  • It only applies to those terms that the consumer
    was not able to influence
  • 1. A contractual term which has not been
    individually negotiated shall be regarded as
    unfair if, contrary to the requirement of good
    faith, it causes a significant imbalance in the
    parties' rights and obligations arising under the
    contract, to the detriment of the consumer.
  • 2. A term shall always be regarded as not
    individually negotiated where it has been drafted
    in advance and the consumer has therefore not
    been able to influence the substance of the term,
    particularly in the context of a pre-formulated
    standard contract. (Art. 3.)

5
Protecting Travellers While Dealing with
(Software) Agents
  • As main traits of this legal discipline we have
    that
  • The excluding criterion is individual
    negotiation, so
  • Its essential to clarify the meaning of
    negotiation
  • Being its basic trait is the possibility of
    influencing the substance of the term and
  • no effective influence is required, for instance
    through an actual change of a term drafted in
    advance or a concession made by the other party
  • However, the simple chance of negotiation is not
    enough, being the supplier available to start
    such procedure, an actual negotiation had to
    happen.

6
Protecting Travellers While Dealing with
(Software) Agents
  • As a first conclusion
  • taylor-made packages are left outside the range
    of most of the consumer protection rules of,
    both, the Directives on electronic commerce and
    on unfair terms in consumer contracts
  • Anyway, consumers are not left in the wild, as
    some protection is still provided by Council
    Directive 90/314/EEC of 13 June 1990 on package
    travel, following Club-Tour / Gonçalves Garrido
    ratio decidendi (ECJ Case C-400/00, 30 April 2002)

7
Protecting Travellers While Dealing with
(Software) Agents
  • And what if the trader negotiates by the means of
    an Intelligent Agent (IA)?
  • Plainly speaking, an IA is a computer program
    which reacts autonomously to changes of their
    environment and solve its task as far as
    possible independently
  • a computer program, or electronic or other
    automated means, used by a person to initiate an
    action, or to respond to electronic messages or
    performances, on the persons behalf without
    review or action by an individual at the time of
    the action or response to the message or
    performance. (UCITA - Uniform Computer
    Information Transactions Act (2001) - USA)

8
Protecting Travellers While Dealing with
(Software) Agents
  • As generally considered, IAs main features are
  • Reactivity (the ability to perceive an
    environment and respond to changes that occur
    with it)
  • Proactivity (the ability to initiate
    goal-directed behaviour)
  • Autonomy (the ability to operate without the
    direct intervention of humans or others, and have
    some kind of control over their action and
    internal state)
  • Social ability (the capacity to interact with
    other intelligent agents or with human beings
    through a shared value)
  • Adaptive behaviour (the ability to adjust to the
    habits, working methods and preferences of a
    user)
  • Mobility (the ability to move around an
    electronic environment).

9
Protecting Travellers While Dealing with
(Software) Agents
  • However, IA are not Agentsas, at least until
    now, they have not the status of legal persons,
    in any jurisdiction
  • So, by the means of imputation, all acts
    performed by an IA are binding to the person that
    put it in place, being the IA a Messenger
    (Nuncius), since it just conveys a persons
    declaration of intention
  • Therefore, the user is fully bound for everything
    done by the IA, even by unexpected communications
    because it is theoretically possible that the
    Program would produce them

10
Protecting Travellers While Dealing with
(Software) Agents
  • Regarding the 'Directive on electronic commerce,
  • As stated at the Executive Summary of the
    Proposal text Member States will not prevent
    the use of electronic systems as intelligent
    electronic agents
  • Besides, Member States shall ensure that their
    legal systems allows contracts to be concluded by
    electronic means. Member States shall in
    particular ensure that legal requirements
    applicable to the contractual process neither
    create obstacles for the use of electronic
    contracts nor result in such contracts being
    deprived of legal effectiveness and validity on
    account of their having been made by electronic
    means. (Art. 9.1)

11
Protecting Travellers While Dealing with
(Software) Agents
  • Also, the UNCITRAL model law on electronic
    commerce (UN General Assembly Resolution 51/162
    of 16 December 1996) goes the same way, even more
    clearly
  • Art. 2 provides that the originator of a data
    message includes both a person by whom or on
    whose behalf a message is purported to have been
    sent, adding the Article-by-Article Remarks
    that .. data messages that are generated
    automatically by computers without direct human
    intervention are intended to be covered by
    subparagraph (c) and
  • Art. 13.2 (b) attributes the operations of
    electronic devices to the person who originates
    the data message if it was sent by an
    information system programmed by, or on behalf
    of, the originator to operate automatically.

12
Protecting Travellers While Dealing with
(Software) Agents
  • In economical terms, the costs of retrieving
    information (Search Agents) and performing
    contracts (Contract Agents) are dramatically
    reduced.
  • Therefore, all contracts might be individually
    negotiated as in pre-modern times and the
    consumer protection regulations based on the
    control of mass contracting tend to become void.
  • So whats the alternative, given the high
    level of consumer protection granted by Art.
    153.1 EC Treaty, also restated at Art. 38 of the
    Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European
    Union?

13
Protecting Travellers While Dealing with
(Software) Agents
  • An answer might be found at Directive 2005/29/EC
    of the European Parliament and of the Council of
    11 May 2005 concerning unfair business-to-consumer
    commercial practices
  • This legal discipline is based on the concept of
    unfair commercial practices harming consumers'
    economic interests (Art 1.1 and 3.1)
  • According to Art. 5, A commercial practice shall
    be unfair if
  • (a) it is contrary to the requirements of
    professional diligence (id est, the standard
    of special skill and care which a trader may
    reasonably be expected to exercise towards
    consumers, commensurate with honest market
    practice and/or the general principle of good
    faith in the trader's field of activity)

14
Protecting Travellers While Dealing with
(Software) Agents
  • (b) it materially distorts or is likely to
    materially distort the economic behaviour with
    regard to the product of the average consumer
    whom it reaches or to whom it is addressed, or of
    the average member of the group when a commercial
    practice is directed to a particular group of
    consumers.
  • Regarding contracts performed by IA, relevant are
    misleading actions (one that contains
    false information and is therefore untruthful or
    in any way, including overall presentation,
    deceives or is likely to deceive the average
    consumer, even if the information is factually
    correct ) (Art. 6 and 7)

15
Protecting Travellers While Dealing with
(Software) Agents
  • Besides, this is a maximum harmonisation (Art.
    3.1 and 5 and Art.4) and, explicitly, horizontal
    Directive (Art. 3.4)
  • Therefore, the programming of IA able to perform
    legally binding contracts within the Internal
    Market will depend on the inclusion of Good Faith
    criteria, not just objective Good Faith but also
    subjective Good Faith
  • And, as a matter of fact, these criteria have
    already been implemented, for instance, in
    robotic football, where fair play is a basic
    requirement.
  • Thank You!
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