NY’s Court of Appeals sends a claim subject to a default judgment to arbitration because, although Uber failed to answer the complaint, it did update its terms of service and provided that its arbitration clause applies to pending claims.
#law #contracts #TermsOfService #Arbitration #Litigation #Uber
https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/contractsprof_blog/2025/04/ny-court-of-appeals-sends-claims-of-injured-uber-user-to-arbitration.html
Join us for the April #CommunityCall today at 09:00 UTC!
This month we're focusing on the #Dating collection. Marie-Pierre Vidonne will share the reasons behind the collection and why tracking dating app terms and conditions matters.
Call in on Jitsi: https://meet.jit.si/OpenTermsArchiveCommunityCall
The Supreme Court of PA is hearing an appeal of a case invalidating Uber’s terms of service. Brett Frischmann has filed an amicus brief in support of the appellees, calling for meaningful informed consent to digital contracts.
#law #contracts #arbitration #litigation #Jury #Uber #TermsOfService
https://getcoai.com/careers/vibe-coder-frontend-developer-role/ #VibeCoder #CodingHumor #InternetCulture #TechSatire #TermsOfService #HackerNews #ngated
@Ullilust read the #ToS in detail and you'll see it.
Am I the only one who actually reads the #TermsOfService #Terms?
There is quite some outrage online over Firefox explicitly (and rather vaguely) outlining their Terms of Use/Privacy policy in a short statement.
What I want to know is if I do what I thought most FF users also do, which is to disable telemetry, Sync, autocomplete, change to a private search engine, etc, then is whatever statement they make entirely moot, since nothing is sent? Or am I missing something?
"Mozilla is Introducing 'Terms of Use' to Firefox" - OMG! Ubuntu
I'm hoping that the line "When you upload or input information through Firefox, you hereby grant us a nonexclusive, royalty-free, worldwide license to use that information to help you navigate, experience, and interact with online content as you indicate with your use of Firefox." doesn't mean that they're taking free reign to train so-called "AI" on everything I do
It looks like it hangs on "as you indicate with your use". So if I don't use the crappy GenAI bullshit then hopefully I'm safe.
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2025/02/mozilla-introducing-terms-of-use-to-firefox
Your #Data #Privacy Is at Risk: 50+ Major #Tech Platforms Exposed for Gaps in #TermsofService
Effective Friday, users of Elon Musk’s X — formerly known as Twitter — can only file lawsuits against the social media platform in a federal district that includes North Texas, where a federal judge owns stock in Tesla.
this is levels of imaginary "gotcha" that are ridiculous
if someone posts hate you squash that hate, end of story. you're doing that anyways. #twitter needs to worry, not the #fediverse
besides this #newyork stop hiding #hate bill is just about posting a #termsofservice, a standard of #moderation. which #mastodon already has with the #mastodonservercovenant
so you just need to post the tos
not in the least. you just need to post a #termsofservice
all #NewYork wants with the Stop Hiding #Hate Act is posting standards of moderation that all the serious servers already agree to in the #mastodonservercovenant
I guess it will hurt rando sleazebag servers full of bigots. who gives a fuck
Telegram’s Privacy Overhaul: IPs and Phone Numbers of Lawbreakers to Be Shared - After the arrest and subsequent release of Telegram CEO Pavel Durov in France, his... - https://news.bitcoin.com/telegrams-privacy-overhaul-ips-and-phone-numbers-of-lawbreakers-to-be-shared/ #artificialintelligence #illegalcontent #lawenforcement #termsofservice #privacypolicy #phonenumbers #ipaddresses #moderators #paveldurov #telegram #news
Interesting: @wikimediafoundation does not engage in the victim-perpetrator role reversal that most organisations put in their #TermsOfService.
Instead of prohibiting use by #children, they make it a ToS violation for everyone on #Wikimedia platforms to engage in #privacy violations *against* minors.
It's as (in-)effective as the usual ban on young people, but makes a clear statement of responsibility.
Further investigation needed, but for now I very much like it!
How companies change their Terms of Service for AI. (giftlink)
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/06/26/technology/terms-service-ai-training.html?unlocked_article_code=1.200.Uwr3.zSXjUXOF5b4O&smid=url-share
#AI #termsofservice #NYT #bigtech #privacy #IP
Again, make your voices heard!
Adobe overhauls terms of service to say it won’t train AI on customers’ work
https://www.theverge.com/2024/6/10/24175416/adobe-overhauls-terms-of-service-update-firefly
Fun fact: It's completely legitimate to close an account because you can't be bothered to keep up to date with #TOS changes.
2004: TOS preamble. yeah yeah *blows past terms of service, loads Medal of Honor Allied Assault, kills Nazis. *
2024: TOS Update? Fuck they fucking with now. *breaks out magnifying glass* Yeah that sounds shady. Fucking Nazis. *uninstall*
Okay, so there's some old caselaw in Canada that says if satellite TV is available for sale you have to pay for it, but if it's some global station you couldn't buy in Canada they don't really care if you just watch it for free. I've been thinking about this in the context of companies selling our stuff to data brokers and AI companies.
Which is to say, a license for scraping my content for use in AI, marketing, machine learning, and other commercial activities is now available for $500 per word, where words are defined to include not only words within posts, but also those found in alt text and hashtags as well as profile data. Pictures, being worth one thousand words, are thus priced at $500k per image. If you continue to scrape any of my content or use previously scraped content after today, you are agreeing to these terms and conditions. Please contact me if you need special bulk rates.
Those Disclaimers You Add To Your Social Media Profiles Do Exactly Nothing
These disclaimers may be popular, but they are usually ineffective.
Sometimes I see someone who will proudly proclaim to the world that they solved some perceived problem with what a social media platform is going by adding some verbiage to their public profile on that platform. For instance, someone on Facebook might add “I do not give Facebook the authorization to do [this and that] with the data in my profile.” That’s cute, and usually ineffective.
Let me explain.
Let’s say BigCorp decides to set up a social medial platform. When you create an account there, they ask if you accept the Terms Of Service (TOS). If you accept them, they create an account. What do you think happens if you don’t accept them? They won’t let you create an account. They might tell you that they are sorry, or the button to create the account might be unclickable until you accept the TOS. Now, in theory, you are free to modify the TOS, and make a counter-offer. However, I’ve not seen any site that has a mechanism to do this.
What I’ve described here is essentially contract negotiation. Someone offers a contract. If you don’t like something in it, you can edit the contract and make a counteroffer. At then end of the day, both you and the other party have to agree to the final contract. Some contracts will contain provisions if you want to change the terms, but even without those provisions, you definitely cannot change a contract unilaterally.
“But what if BigCorp decides to change the TOS?”
They have to notify you of the change. A lot of companies will email you saying the TOS is about to change and encouraging you to read the new TOS. I am pretty sure that they don’t have to highlight the changes, unfortunately. They just need to tell you that there is a new TOS, and where you can read it. You have the choice to accept the new TOS, or reject it. I think there are some cases where a rejection won’t result in the termination of your account. However, in a lot of cases if you reject the new TOS, BigCorp can terminate your account.
“What if I don’t answer?”
If you don’t give an answer to the company regarding the new TOS, it is assumed that you have accepted it.
So let’s say that BigCorp has put into their TOS that they reserve the right to feed your data to AI, or the right they give themselves could be something even broader. If BigCorp, for instance, says that they can do anything with the data you post to their site, then feeding it to AI is part of anything. So you see that, and you decide to add to your profile a stipulation that your data cannot be fed to AI. What have you done?
Nothing. Nothing at all.
None of what you wrote there binds BigCorp. Why? Because you cannot unilaterally change a contract. Adding your stipulation to your profile is not proper notice of the desired change. You’d have to ask BigCorp if they are happy with this. Did you? No. Then your stipulation is ineffective. Let’s say you want to change the TOS and you want BigCorp’s approval. You’d have to find the proper person to ask for this. Maybe opening a ticket with them might work. At any rate, you have to give them the opportunity to refuse. Let’s suppose that you contact BigCorp and tell them of your plan. Can you assume that if they don’t answer, they’ve accepted the new terms?
I think you’d be on thin ice making this assumption. I checked the TOS of Facebook (Meta). First, they say that they can change the TOS whenever they want, they will notify you, and your continued usage of the service means that you’ve accepted the new TOS, just as I explained above. Conversely, they want any change you might want to be made to the TOS to be sent to them in writing and signed by them. Since an absence of response is not a signature, you’re out of luck.
This is partially why I qualified my ineffective with usually. I can see two ways in which your stipulation could work:
However, unilaterally adding a stipulation to your profile without also contacting the company does not work. Some people say they’ve fixed something by adding a stipulation to their profile, without either explaining that the TOS already allowed it, or indicating that they contacted the company to modify the TOS, and that the company accepted their offer.
These people are misleading you.
These people are spreading dangerous misconceptions.
(Original article on substack.)
#AutisticWriters #contract #disclaimers #profiles #SocialMedia #TermsOfService #TOS #YourAutisticLife