(11) This Directive should lay down common rules on certain requirements concerning contracts between traders and consumers for the supply of digital_content or a digital_service.
For this purpose, rules on the conformity of digital_content or a digital_service with the contract, remedies in the event of a lack of such conformity or a failure to supply and the modalities for the exercise of those remedies, as well as on the modification of digital_content or a digital_service, should be fully harmonised.
Fully harmonised rules on some essential elements of consumer contract law would make it easier for businesses, especially SMEs, to offer their products in other Member States.
Consumers would benefit from a high level of consumer protection and welfare gains by fully harmonising key rules.
Member States are precluded within the scope of this Directive from providing for any further formal or substantive requirements.
For example, Member States should not provide for rules on the reversal of the burden of proof that are different from those provided for in this Directive, or for an obligation for the consumer to notify the trader of a lack of conformity within a specific period.
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(41) There are various ways for the trader to supply digital_content or digital_services to consumers.
It is opportune to set simple and clear rules as to the modalities and the time for performing that obligation to supply which is the main contractual obligation of the trader, by making the digital_content or a digital_service available or accessible to the consumer.
The digital_content or digital_service should be considered to be made available or accessible to the consumer when the digital_content or digital_service, or any means suitable for accessing or downloading it, has reached the sphere of the consumer and no further action is required by the trader in order to enable the consumer to use the digital_content or digital_service in accordance with the contract.
Considering that the trader is not in principle responsible for acts or omissions of a third party which operates a physical or virtual facility, for instance an electronic platform or a cloud storage facility, that the consumer selects for receiving or storing the digital_content or digital_service, it should be sufficient for the trader to supply the digital_content or digital_service to that third party.
However, the physical or virtual facility cannot be considered to be chosen by the consumer if it is under the trader's control or is contractually linked to the trader, or where the consumer selected that physical or virtual facility for receipt of the digital_content or digital_service but that choice was the only one offered by the trader to receive or access the digital_content or digital_service.
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(78) The lack of conformity of the digital_content or digital_service as supplied to the consumer is often due to one of the transactions in a chain that links the original designer to the final trader.
While the final trader should be liable towards the consumer in the event of a lack of conformity, it is important to ensure that the trader has appropriate rights vis-à-vis different persons in the chain of transactions in order to be able to cover the liability towards the consumer.
Such rights should be limited to commercial transactions and they should therefore not cover situations where the trader is liable towards the consumer for the lack of conformity of digital_content or a digital_service that is composed of or built upon software which was supplied without the payment of a price under a free and open-source licence by a person in previous links of the chain of transactions.
However, it should be for the Member States under their applicable national law to identify the persons in the chain of transactions against which the final trader can turn and the modalities and conditions of such actions.
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