| The location rewriting is the Backbone router stuff that uses pushState. Pretty common HTML5 stuff, you'd have to be using a moderately old web browser. Most common one we're aware of that's guilty of not supporting this is Firefox 3. What's yours in this case? This is how terms of use work on most websites. In our case, we're in a particularly tricky situation because the meal plans we lay out have the ability to be incredibly useful to our users, but only if they actually comply with them. Since compliance isn't something we can ensure without a human being watching them 24/7 (including when they're asleep in case they're sleep-eaters, an actual phenomenon), we have to put in place that terms of use for that reason and others. Others including situations like people with severe allergies. We cannot guarantee the absence of allergens in recipes/food coming from some of our third party sources. To guarantee as much would endanger the health of our users and would be irresponsible. I'm sorry you don't feel we don't stand behind our product. We really do stand behind what we do and believe we're working on something that has the potential to help a large portion of westerners with weight issues. The nutrition researchers and dietitians we work with feel so strongly about our product that it's being used in a weight loss case study involving many subjects that will allow us to further refine our already substantial improvement on the current state of consumer nutrition. My email is in my profile, contact me if you'd like to discuss this further. I'd be interested to hear what you think we could do to better show we feel confident about our software. |
I understand compliance, allergies etc. are a tricky issue. There a more narrow disclaimer and/or warning (eg. this recipe contains nuts/gluten/...) would be definitely appropriate, not to mention useful if it were on the actual recipe page.
But that's separate to the information that you're providing - I assume meal plans and exercises? In that case the disclaimers completely overstep the mark, and undermine any claims of competence. Would you trust an engineer who disclaimed all liability should their bridge fall down? Or a doctor who wanted you to waive the right to all negligence suits?