โDec-24-2018 06:23 AM
โDec-27-2018 08:17 AM
drsteve wrote:Riiiiight. And if that email that notifies you of changes never gets to you, well that's certainly possible with email after all. "Hey, we sent you an email."fj12ryder wrote:
Generally the fine print says they can change the conditions of the fine print whenever they want to. So basically you just waste your time reading the fine print because it could change 5 minutes later and you'd never know it. It's not a bad idea, but it doesn't really guarantee anything, and generally arbitration is the recourse if you disagree with them at some point, and arbitration rarely favors the one with the grievance.
They can change it, but they are required to notify registered users of that fact. They send out the "Our Terms of Service have changed" email, and a link to the new terms.
โDec-27-2018 07:52 AM
โDec-27-2018 07:32 AM
fj12ryder wrote:
Generally the fine print says they can change the conditions of the fine print whenever they want to. So basically you just waste your time reading the fine print because it could change 5 minutes later and you'd never know it. It's not a bad idea, but it doesn't really guarantee anything, and generally arbitration is the recourse if you disagree with them at some point, and arbitration rarely favors the one with the grievance.
โDec-27-2018 07:27 AM
fj12ryder wrote:
Generally the fine print says they can change the conditions of the fine print whenever they want to. So basically you just waste your time reading the fine print because it could change 5 minutes later and you'd never know it. It's not a bad idea, but it doesn't really guarantee anything, and generally arbitration is the recourse if you disagree with them at some point, and arbitration rarely favors the one with the grievance.
โDec-27-2018 06:10 AM
โDec-26-2018 08:12 PM
AsheGuy wrote:toedtoes wrote:
Read TOCs carefully so that I know what I am agreeing to when signing up on websites, contests, social media, etc.
Wow! It's amazing you have time for anything else if you do that. ๐
โDec-26-2018 05:37 PM
toedtoes wrote:
Read TOCs carefully so that I know what I am agreeing to when signing up on websites, contests, social media, etc.
โDec-26-2018 02:27 PM
โDec-26-2018 11:12 AM
toedtoes wrote:Ok, what are you going to do, or are doing, about it? I find traveling about and never being very specific about where I am works for me.
I think ignoring the info tracked by companies and/or accepting it as OK is a disaster waiting to happen.
โDec-26-2018 11:05 AM
โDec-26-2018 05:31 AM
toedtoes wrote:RedRocket204 wrote:
My comment was primarily sarcasm... except for the part about the advertising. Unless you're doing crime, I seriously doubt there is much interest in the rest of your lives... again, except for the advertising piece.
But isn't that enough?
And isn't the fact that if they decide you are of interest sometime in the future that they can go back and pull years of information on you, a bit extreme?
โDec-25-2018 06:50 PM
The Tinfoil Hat monthly. Edited by Chicken Little.
โDec-25-2018 05:01 PM
โDec-25-2018 04:20 PM
toedtoes wrote:I don't presume that these things are bad.
.. but unfortunately this stuff is real. And the public lets it happen because of the "let them have my info, I've got nothing to hide" attitude.