It is common practice in many organisations for users of subscription resources to ‘borrow’ other people’s log-in details and, indeed, many licensing agreements are based on ‘average number of user’ or ‘maximum number of user’ agreements to prevent losses to the software supplier from this practice.
However, many subscription agreements are user-specific and, in such a case, lending one’s log-in details is likely to breach the licensing agreement and the software supplier will have a right of action to recover damages. This is actually relatively easy to police, as each different machine that is used to log into the relevant website will have a different ‘digital signature’.
Recently, the Financial Times commenced just such an action, alleging in a US court that a large international asset management group had breached its licensing agreement, accessing thousands of articles improperly over several years. Interestingly, the individual licence cost which is the subject matter of the claim is only $299.





We would like to thank you for the superb work and attention to detail that has gone into our dispute with the council so far!