业务
产品责任
责任
产品(数学)
法律与经济学
经济
会计
数学
几何学
出处
期刊:Journal of European Tort Law
[De Gruyter]
日期:2024-07-25
卷期号:15 (2): 172-224
标识
DOI:10.1515/jetl-2024-0011
摘要
Abstract The new Directive on Product Liability is hard to overestimate, as it is nothing less than a complete overhaul of the 1985 Product Liability Directive (PLD), which still lies at the heart of EU tort law. One focus of the reform act is the challenge posed by digital transformation. To accommodate the new category of digital devices, the concept of product is widened so as to include software and related services, and the strict ex ante perspective for the finding of product defect is attenuated to account for continued control of the manufacturer post-marketing. Further to broadening the scope of application, the protective perimeter of the Directive is expanded, namely to include data used for private purposes. The second focus of the reform act, of at least equal importance, are changes to the liability regime for products of any kind, regardless of their digital nature or elements. Thus, e-commerce intermediaries such as platforms are ushered into the scope of the Directive as new defendants, alongside manufacturers, importers, and distributors. With a view to quantum, the € 500 retention for property damage had to go, together with the authority of the Member States to impose a cap on liability under the Directive. Unfortunately, there was no time to revisit the foundations of product liability. Thus, the new Directive holds on to the consumer protection gospel of product liability and excludes commercial property from the scope of protection, even though there is no good reason to discriminate against business interests. As before, national law must and will step in to fill in the gaps in Union law, perpetuating the double-track liability systems that the 1985 Directive helped to create.
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