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LN

@bob_zim @thomasfuchs I'm always surprised by the customer hostility of US laws but that can't possibly be legal. Normally the process is that you have to accept new terms of service explicitly, not that you have to jump through hoops to keep the old ones.

1 comment
Zimmie

@ln @thomasfuchs Changes to the terms of service are generally legal, though I don’t think anybody has taken a change this big to court to get a solid answer. Generally, courts would frown upon big changes which are totally one-sided, such as adding that you agree to waive your right to join any class action suits about past or future behavior. By saying you waive your right to join *any* legal suit against the company, but you can use individual arbitration instead, they get the same result while looking less one-sided.

@ln @thomasfuchs Changes to the terms of service are generally legal, though I don’t think anybody has taken a change this big to court to get a solid answer. Generally, courts would frown upon big changes which are totally one-sided, such as adding that you agree to waive your right to join any class action suits about past or future behavior. By saying you waive your right to join *any* legal suit against the company, but you can use individual arbitration instead, they get the same result while...

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