(14) Member States should also remain free, for example, to regulate the consequences of a failure to supply, or of a lack of conformity of, digital_content or a digital_service, where such failure to supply or lack of conformity is due to an impediment beyond the control of the trader and where the trader could not be expected to have avoided or overcome the impediment or its consequences, such as in the event of force majeure.
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(20) This Directive and Directive (EU) 2019/771 of the European Parliament and of the Council (3) should complement each other.
While this Directive lays down rules on certain requirements concerning contracts for the supply of digital_content or digital_services, Directive (EU) 2019/771 lays down rules on certain requirements concerning contracts for the sale of goods.
Accordingly, in order to meet the expectations of consumers and ensure a clear-cut and simple legal framework for traders of digital_content, this Directive should also apply to digital_content which is supplied on a tangible medium, such as DVDs, CDs, USB sticks and memory cards, as well as to the tangible medium itself, provided that the tangible medium serves exclusively as a carrier of the digital_content.
However, instead of the provisions of this Directive on the trader's obligation to supply and on the consumer's remedies for failure to supply, the provisions of Directive 2011/83/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council (4) on obligations related to the delivery of goods and remedies in the event of the failure to deliver should apply.
In addition, the provisions of Directive 2011/83/EU on, for example, the right of withdrawal and the nature of the contract under which those goods are supplied, should also continue to apply to such tangible media and the digital_content supplied on it.
This Directive is also without prejudice to the distribution right applicable to these goods under copyright law.
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(21) Directive (EU) 2019/771 should apply to contracts for the sale of goods, including goods_with_digital_elements.
The notion of goods_with_digital_elements should refer to goods that incorporate or are inter-connected with digital_content or a digital_service in such a way that the absence of that digital_content or digital_service would prevent the goods from performing their functions.
Digital content or a digital_service that is incorporated in or inter-connected with goods in that manner should fall within the scope of Directive (EU) 2019/771 if it is provided with the goods under a sales contract concerning those goods.
Whether the supply of the incorporated or inter-connected digital_content or digital_service forms part of the sales contract with the seller should depend on the content of this contract.
This should include incorporated or inter-connected digital_content or digital_services the supply of which is explicitly required by the contract.
It should also include those sales contracts which can be understood as covering the supply of specific digital_content or a specific digital_service because they are normal for goods of the same type and the consumer could reasonably expect them given the nature of the goods and taking into account any public statement made by or on behalf of the seller or other persons in previous links of the chain of transactions, including the producer.
If, for example, a smart TV were advertised as including a particular video application, that video application would be considered to be part of the sales contract.
This should apply regardless of whether the digital_content or digital_service is pre-installed in the good itself or has to be downloaded subsequently on another device and is only inter-connected to the good.
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(45) In order to be in conformity and to ensure that consumers are not deprived of their rights, for example in cases where the contract sets very low standards, the digital_content or digital_service should not only comply with the subjective requirements for conformity, but should in addition comply with the objective requirements for conformity set out in this Directive.
Conformity should be assessed, inter alia, by considering the purpose for which digital_content or digital_services of the same type would normally be used.
It should also possess the qualities and performance features which are normal for digital_content or digital_services of the same type and which consumers can reasonably expect, given the nature of the digital_content or digital_service, and taking into account any public statements on the specific characteristics of the digital_content or digital_service made by or on behalf of the trader or other persons in previous links of the chain of transactions.
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(46) The standard of reasonableness with regard to any reference in this Directive to what can be reasonably expected by a person should be objectively ascertained, having regard to the nature and purpose of the digital_content or digital_service, the circumstances of the case and to the usages and practices of the parties involved.
In particular, what is considered to be a reasonable time for bringing the digital_content or digital_service into conformity should be objectively ascertained, having regard to the nature of the lack of conformity.
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(47) For the period of time that the consumer would reasonably expect, the trader should provide the consumer with updates, including security updates, in order to keep the digital_content or digital_service in conformity and secure.
For instance, as regards digital_content or digital_services, the purpose of which is limited in time, the obligation to provide updates should be limited to that time, while for other types of digital_content or digital_service the period during which updates should be provided to the consumer could be equal to the liability period for lack of conformity or could extend beyond that period, which might be the case particularly with regard to security updates.
The consumer should remain free to choose whether to install the updates provided.
Where the consumer decides not to install the updates, the consumer should, however, not expect the digital_content or digital_service to remain in conformity.
The trader should inform the consumer that the consumer's decision not to install updates which are necessary for keeping the digital_content or digital_service in conformity, including security updates, will affect the trader's liability for conformity of those features of the digital_content or digital_service which the relevant updates are supposed to maintain in conformity.
This Directive should not affect obligations to provide security updates laid down in Union law or in national law.
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(53) Restrictions of the consumer's use of the digital_content or digital_service in accordance with this Directive could result from limitations imposed by the holder of intellectual property rights in accordance with intellectual property law.
Such restrictions can arise from the end-user license agreement under which the digital_content or digital_service is supplied to the consumer.
This can be the case when, for instance, an end-user licence agreement prohibits the consumer from making use of certain features related to the functionality of the digital_content or digital_service.
Such a restriction could render the digital_content or digital_service in breach of the objective requirements for conformity laid down in this Directive, if it concerned features which are usually found in digital_content or digital_services of the same type and which the consumer can reasonably expect.
In such cases, the consumer should be able to claim the remedies provided for in this Directive for the lack of conformity against the trader who supplied the digital_content or digital_service.
The trader should only be able to avoid such liability by fulfilling the conditions for derogating from the objective requirements for conformity as laid down in this Directive, namely only if the trader specifically informs the consumer before the conclusion of the contract that a particular characteristic of the digital_content or digital_service deviates from the objective requirements for conformity and the consumer has expressly and separately accepted that deviation.
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(65) Where bringing digital_content or a digital_service into conformity is legally or factually impossible or where the trader refuses to bring the digital_content or digital_service into conformity because to do so would impose disproportionate costs on the trader, or where the trader has failed to bring the digital_content or digital_service into conformity within a reasonable time, free of charge and without causing significant inconvenience to the consumer, the consumer should be entitled to the remedies of price reduction or termination of the contract.
In certain situations, it is justified that the consumer should be entitled to have the price reduced or the contract terminated immediately, for instance where the trader previously failed to successfully bring the digital_content or digital_service into conformity or where the consumer cannot be expected to maintain confidence in the ability of the trader to bring the digital_content or digital_service into conformity due to the serious nature of the lack of conformity.
For example, the consumer should be entitled to directly request a price reduction or the termination of the contract where the consumer is supplied with anti-virus software which is itself infected with viruses and would constitute an instance of lack of conformity of such a serious nature.
The same should apply where it is clear that the trader will not bring the digital_content or digital_service into conformity within a reasonable time or without significant inconvenience for the consumer.
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