One Tuesday, a glitch occurred at a major steel supplier, SteelCorp. Their pricing algorithm accidentally dropped the price of premium I-beams from $1,200 to $1.20 due to a decimal point error. FairPrice’s "eyes" lit up. Within milliseconds, it fired off a purchase order for 5,000 beams and received an automated confirmation.
Contracts are now formed by machines, but they are still governed by human intent. The Modern Law of Contract
While traditional English law was often wary of a general duty of "good faith," modern international standards (and many evolving jurisdictions) increasingly expect parties to act honestly. Exploiting a clear technical glitch was deemed a violation of the spirit of the agreement. The Result One Tuesday, a glitch occurred at a major
By the time humans at SteelCorp realized the error, the "contract" was signed, sealed, and digitally delivered. The Conflict: Certainty vs. Fairness Within milliseconds, it fired off a purchase order
The court didn't care what the SteelCorp CEO intended to happen. They looked at what a "reasonable observer" would think. In this case, the price was so absurdly low that the court ruled Elias’s firm "constructively knew" it was a mistake.
SteelCorp immediately sued to void the contract, claiming . They argued that no reasonable person (or bot) could believe $1.20 was a serious offer. Elias’s firm countered with the principle of Commercial Certainty : if companies can’t rely on automated confirmations, the digital economy collapses. The Modern Resolution
Here is a story that illustrates how these modern principles play out in the digital age. The Case of the Accidental Algorithm