Unless otherwise unambiguously indicated by the language or the circumstances:
(1) An offer to make a contract invites acceptance in any manner and by any medium reasonable under the circumstances.
(2) An order or other offer to acquire a copy for prompt or current delivery invites acceptance by either a prompt promise to ship or a prompt or current shipment of a conforming or nonconforming copy. However, a shipment of a nonconforming copy is not an acceptance if the licensor seasonably notifies the licensee that the shipment is offered only as an accommodation to the licensee.
(3) If the beginning of a requested performance is a reasonable mode of acceptance, an offeror that is not notified of acceptance or performance within a reasonable time may treat the offer as having lapsed before acceptance.
(4) If an offer in an electronic message evokes an electronic message accepting the offer, a contract is formed:
(A) When an electronic acceptance is received; or
(B) If the response consists of beginning performance, full performance, or giving access to information, when the performance is received or the access is enabled and necessary access materials are received.
Structure Maryland Statutes
Title 22 - Maryland Uniform Computer Information Transactions Act
Section 22-201 - Formal Requirements
Section 22-202 - Formation in General
Section 22-203 - Offer and Acceptance in General
Section 22-204 - Acceptance With Varying Terms
Section 22-205 - Conditional Offer or Acceptance
Section 22-206 - Offer and Acceptance: Electronic Agents
Section 22-207 - Formation: Releases of Informational Rights
Section 22-208 - Adopting Terms of Records
Section 22-209 - Mass-Market License
Section 22-210 - Terms of Contract Formed by Conduct
Section 22-211 - Pretransaction Disclosures in Internet-Type Transactions
Section 22-212 - Efficacy and Commercial Reasonableness of Attribution Procedure
Section 22-213 - Determining Attribution
Section 22-214 - Electronic Error: Consumer Defenses
Section 22-215 - Electronic Message: When Effective; Effect of Acknowledgment