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by reginaldjcooper
4661 days ago
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I've noticed typically I agree with your views, but on this case we diverge. I think it's reasonable to assume that when the service cannot be accessed before the accessor clicks "agree", and the accessor clicks "agree", that constitutes a valid contractual agreement. It's no more silly than mailing in a credit card application and being bound by those terms. The fundamental attributes are present. There is a contract and you can agree to it or not. Your interaction with the company is viewing the terms the lawyers wrote and agreeing to them or leaving the website. |
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There is no signature, there is no proof of identity of the signing party (copy of personal ID, witness, ...). Usually no confirmation that other side also accepted it. No copy of ToS received after "accepting". We all know that it could be that, for example, my 4yo child clicked on it when I went to the toilet after reading first few paragraphs of ToS, and now I'm somehow bound to it? Also, it happens very frequently that you "accept" some ToS, and after two years you find on some forum that Google, or PayPal just changed their ToS without sending you the updated copy for acceptance.
Sorry, but too many things that are really different between ToS and a real acceptance of a Contract.