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by Kim_Bruning 1630 days ago
We don't need to get this creative.

Say I mail a dead tree letter to the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education. And say in that letter I put a request for information on a particular teacher.

They send me a bit of a heavy envelope back. Which is a bit funny for my simple query but eh, I've gotten heavy envelopes before . The first page actually has the answer to my query, and then there seems to be a large number of pages of small print.

Normally people don't really read the small print, but today I'll do it anyway (maybe I'm suspicious due to the large packet) . What I find is that there's some normal legalese for a page or two I guess, and then on say page 5 through 100 it's actually a table with row after row of teacher's names and social security numbers. Ok, that's not good.

So the letter is addressed to me, and it landed on my doormat. It's pretty clear I'm the intended recipient.

In THAT case, I don't think it would fly for the state to go "But you were only supposed to read the first page, you were never supposed to read small print". I think that might be going a bit too far.

* If we assume the letter was printed by a computer, and

* And we assume the same knuckleheads who wrote the website also wrote the letter printing code.

Then it's not so much an analogy as it is very nearly the same thing (but now in terms a lawyer can understand, hopefully). All we've done is changed the underlying protocol and representation.