• @[email protected]
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    218 months ago

    How can they “force” anything if you dont sign? By not agreeing to new terms… you dont agree to the terms. Wouldnt having it any other way just be insanity? Like i could write “contract” here that by viewing it you agree to it and if you dont agree, i could still claim that some part of it applies because it reads so in the contract. Or I have some other contract that is agreeable and someone signs it, then I change the terms and other party can’t reject them all because of something in the first contract.

    • @[email protected]
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      388 months ago

      Internet companies usually have clauses that they can terminate the agreement at any time for any reason, including “because they feel like it”. They usually don’t have to tell you why, either.

      Same deal with all the “licensing” things and “digital goods ownership”. In two words: you don’t.

      But it’s been that way for ages.

      • @[email protected]
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        8 months ago

        Especially if it’s something free or subscription based. It’s just a “our rules have changed, if you don’t like it stop using it/paying for it”

        It’s get very dodgy when it’s a physical thing you’ve bought like that Roku agreement a few weeks back, but I doubt they’ll let that stop them.

        • @[email protected]
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          28 months ago

          They can just put in the initial contract a clause that basically they can change the contract as they see fit, when they see fit, and if you don’t like it, too bad.

          That pretty much wipes out a lot of recourse for most people when it comes to changes in costs and services.

    • BoscoBear
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      238 months ago

      As my lawyer used to tell me, “there is the contract and there is the law.” Meaning anyone can say anything in a contract. If you have the legal ability you can find out what the law says about it.