https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cwy9j8ldp0lo
Couple learns the hard way about accepting terms & conditions willy nilly. Has their lie about their 12 year old ordering food and accepting ToS for them get shut down in court.
People shouldn't be required to have a law degree to use a service or a piece of software.
Poor corp. They can't legally kill you because you agreed to their terms of service.
Certified Disney moment. I'm not talking about companies doing surgery and whatnot.
There's some inherent risk of death there.
Disney did something along the lines of sneaking in terms saying by signing up to Disney+ that you can never sue Disney for anything, ever regardless of if it is related to Disney+ so if you're seriously injured at one of their theme parks you can't sue.
I think a car company, put something like that in the T&S for signing up to their news letter saying you cannot sue them if their car fails and you're injured or something like that.
Gotta love how soulless corporations and their lawyers are to try that kind of shit
I seem to also recall a judge throw out some other EULA agreement saying it was so long and full of complex and almost impossible to decipher terminology and redirection that even he as a legal expert found it too difficult to fully understand so it was unreasonable any average person would .
I remember my favourite one now... Gamestation, a video games store, changed their terms and conditions once to say if you bought a game from them online you agreed they had ownership of your soul.
over 7000 people agreed without knowing.
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