The Web's Longest Disclaimer
An anonymous reader writes "American Airlines are nominated for the 'longest website enduser agreement' category with customers requiring to accept this mammoth 'I accept' dialog before using their site. The tale of the tape includes: 181 paragraphs; 3482 words; and
22411 characters. However even mentioning this is probably in violation of the text."
...and even a printable version, in case my toilet runs out of paper ... now *that* is service!
This is probably a way of hiding 'offensive' paragraphs. I'd say that most end-user agreements are too long. A solution to this would be a legal phrasing and a readable phrasing (i.e. a shorter, readable form with the main points).
Its not like we really read the disclaimers. The only websites I read the disclaimers are porn sites, because you never know if they say, "By clicking here you agree to be billed $29.99"
I checked the EULA out, and apparantly, it is inconsequential weather or not you click "i agree" or "i do not agree"
Clicking "i do not agree" still brings you to the same page...
Probably the first time in history that an airline had to close down due to slashdot.
My Aurora : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o91ZsGwJYyg
FB : https://www.facebook.com/TanveersPhotography
According to this :
O. Take any action that will or could impose an unreasonable or disproportionately large load on our site infrastructure.
Funny - it's quicker to NOT ACCEPT as accepting takes you to the AAdvantage enrollment while NOT accepting drops you right into making a reservation.
However even mentioning this is probably in violation of the text
:)
taken from the disclaimer:
American Airlines specifically denies you permission to hyperlink or provide references to the Site, unless you are allowed to do so under a separate written agreement with American Airlines
so yes, you did violate a portion of it
GoatPigSheep, the 3 most important food groups
"You may not copy, display, distribute, download, license, modify, publish, re-post, reproduce, reuse, sell, transmit, use to create a derivative work, or otherwise use the content of the Site for public or commercial purposes. Nothing on the Site shall be construed to confer any grant or license of any intellectual property rights, whether by estoppel, by implication, or otherwise."
:D
If you cant even display it, how is it legal to even review the agreement?
So I can still book a flight without agreeing to donate my firstborn to their catering department.
Andrew
It's about AAs frequent flyer program, not about the whole site (the title and the URL says it):
If you choose not to accept these terms, you may enroll in the AAdvantage program offline by contacting AAdvantage Reservations/Customer Service.
"You're not allowed to use our planes to fly them into buildings."
I decided to scroll around it for a minute and happened upon this gem:
I mean, that's stupid. If your incompetent network admin leaks the travel schedules of me and 10,000 other Americans, we "voluntarily" waive the right to sue you?
If I was me (and I am), I would simply choose another airline who doesn't want to try and hoodwink me into something I will regret.
American Airlines specifically denies you permission to hyperlink or provide references to the Site
Oops. Sorry Slashdot.. You've been bad
American Airlines will not treat as confidential any communications you send to us by electronic mail or otherwise. American Airlines has no obligation to refrain from publishing, reproducing, or otherwise using your communications in any way and for any purpose.
Thank You for respecting my privacy
------------
An example of lawyers that don't understand technology
Download or upload files that may damage the operation of another's computer, such as computer viruses, corrupt files, or similar software
When was the last time you downloaded something that hurt a website
Ohh.. I'm sure there's more intresting stuff in there... And I'm also pretty damn sure it's not the longest EULA...
Shut up. If, the next time we need to go past an EULA, we need to type some kind of word shown as an image that can only be read using a mirror, a prism, and polaroid glasses, we all know you're to blame!
Got brain?
- American Airlines specifically denies you permission to hyperlink or provide references to the Site, unless you are allowed to do so under a separate written agreement with American Airlines.
I hope timothy didn't accept the license before posting the story.It does appear that most of it has been stolen from any other terms and conditions page and hacked around to fit American Airlines... Especially all those bits about using their website to distribute files that shouldn't be distributed (who's going to use AA to distribute mp3's?!?!?)
Note: Posting under a hack3d a/c to prove that i'm a karma donator.
"You agree to indemnify, defend, and hold harmless American Airlines and its affiliates from and against any and all claims, demands, proceedings, suits and actions, including any related liabilities, obligations, losses, damages, deficiencies, penalties, taxes, levies, fines, judgments, settlements, expenses (including legal and accountants' fees and disbursements) and costs (collectively, "Claims"), based on, arising out of or resulting from your use of the Site, including without limitation any Claims alleging facts that if true would constitute your breach of this Agreement."
So if you book a ticket online, and they screw up, you can't get your money back?
This is a perfect example of how inadequate laws make life cumbersome for both corporations and their customers.
From the company's standpoint, EULA's could be a real headache, because the company has to hammer out pages upon pages of legalese to cover its own arse.
From the consumer's perspective, ever-expanding EULA's are just as much a nuisance as a potential pitfall when not read properly. It becomes impractical to read them, yet the less you read them before agreeing, the more you expose yourself to being taken advantage of.
The solution is more laws and better laws, and this is where the government CAN do good. If most things that are common sense can be nailed down in public law (i.e. we're not responsible if you scald yourself with hot coffee, we will not spam you, etc.), then EULAs could be trimmed and focused on the unique essentials of a particular situation. That would benefit both consumers and corporations. The only losers in this situation would be all the parasitic lawyers and the sneaky folks with dubious EULAs (*cough* Microsoft *cough*).
I think the key line in that agreement is
Likewise, [...] this agreement will be considered broadened to the extent needed to permit [...] third parties to operate within the terms of a written agreement they have entered into with us.
In other words, this policy you have to agree to is only valid as long as it doesn't interfere with agreements AA has and will make with 3rd parties. Which basically means, you're agreeing to anything that AA and its partners agree to.
It reminds me of a lot of EULAs/policies where there is a long list of who the company might and might not share information with and may seem very stringent, but at the very end of the list is a short give away line to the effect that they can share the information with anybody.
Also, it would be illegal according to the terms of the agreement to post this policy here, as in their policy you agree not to "copy, display, distribute, download, license, modify, publish, re-post, reproduce, reuse, sell, transmit" any of their HTML code or "the content of the Site" for public or commercial purposes.
"Teachers leave us kids alone
Or how about the fact that you must not: O. Take any action that will or could impose an unreasonable or disproportionately large load on our site infrastructure. So no posting on Slashdot either!
Never email donotemail@WeAreSpammers.com
Something similar has been posted here before: Longest email disclaimer awards. The longest disclaimer was apparently 7K large and the unlucky "winner" was UBS Warburg.
Also, an analysis of stupid e-mail disclaimers.
Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
Couldn't they provide a version of their 'terms & conditions' which includes a little video with airhostesses miming actions to clarify it...
... When you reach paragraph 17 masks will automatically drop from the compartment above. Please ensure that your rights have been securely passed to us before helping those sitting next to you ... etc"
"Our trademarks and logos are protected *here* and *here*
That way everyone could click on the "I accept" after ignoring the whole thing with a clear conscience!
One for the longest disclaimer, and one for the most un-read disclaimer. Hmmm... wonder why?
political_news.c: warning: comparison is always true due to limited range of data type
I think it's IBM that when you are downloading a new BIOS for your ThinkPad or whatever, you actually have to type "agree" for the installer to make the boot floppy with the new BIOS image on it.
What I'm not understanding is why don't we DOS their lawyers, by asking a LOT of technical questions about this "agreement." Like call the 800 number and tell them you have a question about para. 14, line 8 in the online agreement, and you'd like some clarification. Then send certified mail asking the same thing.
It wouldn't acomplish much, but it would make some poor schmuck's day at the office more miserable. Schadenfeude or whatever you call it. It would also be cool to know if there could be such thing of a write-in slashdot effect.
By the way, did you know that when you call AA to book a flight, you could be talking to a prison inmate? I feel warm and fuzzy just thinking about telling convicted felons the exact dates I won't be in my home.
Which has got to be just about the stupidest thing possible .... a web site no one's allowed to link to is one that no one can access.
Did you try hitting the "I do not accept" button. It gives you the exactly same services as the "I accept" does. Does this mean, that now I can just break any rules they stated in that legal jargon :) ?
I found it many years ago:
This product is meant for educational purposes only. Any resemblance to real persons living or dead is purely coincidental. Void where prohibited. Some assembly required. List each check separately by bank number. Batteries not included. Contents may settle during shipment. Use only as directed. No other warranty expressed or implied. Do not use while operating a motor vehicle or heavy equipment. Postage will be paid by addressee. Subject to CAB approval. This is not an offer to sell securities. Apply only to affected area. May be too intense for some viewers. Do not stamp. Use other side for additional listings. For recreational use only. Do not disturb. All models over 18 years of age. If condition persists, consult your physician. No user-serviceable parts inside. Freshest if eaten before date on carton. Subject to change without notice. Times approximate. Simulated picture. No postage necessary if mailed in the United States. Please remain seated until the ride has come to a complete stop. Breaking seal constitutes acceptance of agreement. For off-road use only. As seen on TV. One size fits all. Many suitcases look alike. Contains a substantial amount of non-tobacco ingredients. Colors may fade. We have sent the forms which seem right for you. Slippery when wet. For office use only. Not affiliated with the American Red Cross. Drop in any mailbox. Edited for television. Keep cool; process promptly. Post office will not deliver without postage. List was current at time of printing. Return to sender, no forwarding order on file, unable to forward. Not responsible for direct, indirect, incidental or consequential damages resulting from any defect, error or failure to perform. At participating locations only. Not the Beatles. Penalty for private use. See label for sequence. Substantial penalty for early withdrawal. Do not write below this line. Falling rock. Lost ticket pays maximum rate. Your canceled check is your receipt. Add toner. Place stamp here. Avoid contact with skin. Sanitized for your protection. Be sure each item is properly endorsed. Sign here without admitting guilt. Slightly higher west of the Mississippi. Employees and their families are not eligible. Beware of dog. Contestants have been briefed on some questions before the show. Limited time offer, call now to ensure prompt delivery. You must be present to win. No passes accepted for this engagement. No purchase necessary. Processed at location stamped in code at top of carton. Shading within a garment may occur. Use only in a well-ventilated area. Keep away from fire or flames. Replace with same type. Approved for veterans. Booths for two or more. Check here if tax deductible. Some equipment shown is optional. Price does not include taxes. No Canadian coins. Not recommended for children. Prerecorded for this time zone. Reproduction strictly prohibited. No solicitors. No alcohol, dogs or horses. No anchovies unless otherwise specified. Restaurant package, not for resale. List at least two alternate dates. First pull up, then pull down. Call toll free number before digging. Driver does not carry cash. Some of the trademarks mentioned in this product appear for identification purposes only. Objects in mirror may be closer than they appear. Record additional transactions on back of previous stub. Unix is a registered trademark of AT&T. Do not fold, spindle or mutilate. No transfers issued until the bus comes to a complete stop. Package sold by weight, not volume. Your mileage may vary. Known as Hellman's east of the Rockies. Beware of greeks bearing gifts. Beware of gifts bearing greeks. This side up. Don't take any wooden nickels. Don't take candy from strangers. Void where prohibited. Caveat Emptor (Buyer beware) Caveat Vendor (Beware of street people). Donde esta el bano. Beware of DOS. Look both ways before crossing the street. All your base are belong to us. Always wear safety belt. Always wear deodorant. Don't forget to breathe. If you park, don't drink...accidents cause people. This supersedes all previous notices.
This modified disclaimer may not be copied without the expressed written consent of whoever I stole it from.
Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
I mean, come on. Has it dawned on anyone else out there that these butt-covering disclaimers are becoming meaningless? What I'd really like to see would be a court opinion to the general idea of "the agreement was written in Legalese, which is no more readable to the person agreeing to the contract than Latin or Esparanto. Given that the person agreeing to the contract could not reasonably be expected to hire an attorney to understand his or her rights before clicking OK in order to buy airline tickets (or install Windows, ahem), the EULA as given is essentially an unenforcable abrogation of constitutionally protected rights. Therefore, the EULA in its entirety is invalid."
Of course, some fucknut tort lawyers would have to get real jobs, but I promise to lose 10^-30 seconds of sleep over that one.
Yeah, I know, I'm dreaming. Is that my alarm clock?
political_news.c: warning: comparison is always true due to limited range of data type
[You shall not] Monitor or copy any Content by using any manual process, or any robot, spider, or other automatic device, without first obtaining American Airlines' prior written consent.
However:
$ wget http://www.aa.com/robots.txt
--10:23:00-- http://www.aa.com:80/robots.txt
=> `robots.txt' Connecting to www.aa.com:80... connected!
HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 404 Not found
10:23:01 ERROR 404: Not found.
So they've not got a robots.txt file. Do they expect web crawlers to read and understand this also??
Sparks:Gadget:Beer Maker
American Airlines specifically denies you permission to hyperlink or provide references to the Site, unless you are allowed to do so under a separate written agreement with American Airlines. You are also denied permission to use any trademarked or copyrighted material to provide such hyperlinks or references, unless you are allowed to do so under a separate written agreement with American Airlines. American Airlines bears no responsibility for sites that provide hyperlinks or references to the Site unless those sites are operated by American Airlines.
Is it illegal if I haven't agreed?
What can they do to me
Why do they care if people link to them
What a load of rubbish
Sorry probably a waste of ones and zeroes but not as much as that dribble. The agreement says it is to protect your privacy while using the site but if you read the whole agreement they can do what ever they want with third parties, no recourse to tell you and the agreement can be changed at any time anyway. They aren't protecting privacy at all in that document in fact it looks pretty much like they have already sold their customers down the river and added a clause in the agreement that you can not sue them for anything that results from using the site, like the selling of personal information.
So the agreement should read
We can and will sell your information to third parties.
If you use this site you can not sue us.
It would be an easier read at that.
But the can't hyperlink clause is funny.
I was thinking of the immortal words of Socrates, who said: "I drank what?" - Chris Knight (Val Kilmer)- Real Genius
I especially like how nicely formatted and spaced it is, ensuring optimum readibility.
Block-right text and no paragraph breaks? It almost looks like a Slashdot comment...
--Jeremy
Jesus was a liberal
"You agree that you will not Misuse the Site. "Misuse" includes, but is not limited to, using the Site to do any of the following:"
You know the EULA is too long when on a "you will not" clause, the bullets go all the way to the letter S
While an undergrad, one course (taught in Prolog) required all the students to take a given program, amend it and provide hardcopy traces of the output after each of the 5 stages to show that the program "still worked." Leaving aside the inherent flaws (which I could argue mean the original program could never "work!") I stumbled upon the documentary requirement placed on students. Two of us produced the first phase of the first part's printed documentation and a projection that a complete answer would cost tens of thousands of pounds in paper and ink and take several years to print even given exclusive use of the university's fastest printers. When challenged, the lecturer (who set this dastardly task) explained that all he really wanted was a 'heavy' submission from each student - in order to dissuade moderators from questioning the grades he deemed appropriate as they would have no desire to wade through a few hundred pages of output before making their case!
The sooner people realise that documentary complexity and volume doesn't gain advantages the better. It would be great to see a shift in opinion about such treatise requiring that the document be taken as a whole - and considered void in it's entirety should it contain anything redundant, unnecessarily convoluted or not legally binding. If this doesn't happen, I can only envisage licenses plummet further towards their own obsolescence.
If I ever want to create a license agreement I can just refer to their site. They have everything in there. I can just take the bits an pieces that sound official, change the wording a little, and voila! poor mans EULA.
"Misuse" includes, but is not limited to, using the Site to do any of the following:
...
O. Take any action that will or could impose an unreasonable or disproportionately large load on our site infrastructure.
Timothy, take down that link!
Any sufficiently advanced libertarian utopia is indistinguishable from government.
There is nothing at all newsworthy here, for nerds, or anyone else. Come on, editors...don't accept junk like this.
Sorry, but as a translator I have had quite a few major web sites to translate and this EULA (read "charter" in most other languages) is neither shorter nor longer in any significant way than most others I've seen. For obvious reasons, I'm not going to say what these other sites are (professional ethics...), but I will say that since words are my billing units, meaning I have to count them every time, I know what I'm talking about. 3000 to 4000 words is commonplace -- and believe me, translating them is boring!
No, your children are not the special ones. Nor are your pets.
> However even mentioning this is probably in violation of the text.
Yep:
"You agree that you will not Misuse the Site. "Misuse" includes, but is not limited to, using the Site to do any of the following:
[..]
O. Take any action that will or could impose an unreasonable or disproportionately large load on our site infrastructure."
- N.
I guess it doesn't even really matter...I clicked on the "I do NOT accept" button and still got on the site.
:)
Pay lawyers $100,000 to write a perfect agreement but pay a web master only $200 and the whole things goes to hell.
hook
"...even mentioning this is probably in violation of the text."
You can't violate the EULA if you don't accept it. If you don't accept it, I guess you can't fly American Air!
"The last paragraph, however, is the greatest laugh-inducer:
:)"
If any provision of this Agreement is found to be invalid or unenforceable, then the invalid or unenforceable provision will be stricken from this Agreement without affecting the validity or enforceability of any other provision.
So, they could essentially put "You must name your first child after American Airlines", have it be struck down as idiotic, but the rest of the agreement still stands...nice
You must get a lot of laughs then, because I've seen that clause in a LOT of online and offline agreements. Basically if the law says a particular clause doesn't hold up in court the rest isn't invalid. IANAL of course so I can't say how legal that position is.
while it goes on to state:
please review and accept the following terms and conditions before continuing on AA.com.
Instant, uh-huh...
---
the pen is mightier than the sword, the sword is mightier than the court, the court is mightier than the pen.
Actually this is not an EULA it rather is a FAQ. If you read the subjectlines of the paragraphs you see that this is not about binding a customer, rather it is to explain what happens in certain circumstances. I'd say that this is actually a good document.
"A language that doesn't affect the way you think about programming, is not worth knowing" - Alan Perlis
Shame their 9/11 security wasn't as tight as their web site T's and C's.
If it's on-topic to talk about silly EULA's and not just long ones then the silliest clause I've ever seen was for iBill's Commerce Management Interface. It's changed now but at the end of the disclaimer it used to say that you agreed to be bound by the terms and conditions if you either (a) click agree or (b) "close this browser window".
Disclaimer: Any resemblance between the above views
and those of my employer, my terminal, or the view out
my window are purely coincidental. Any resemblance
between the above and my own views is non-deterministic.
The question of the existence of views in the absence
of anyone to hold them is left as an exercise for the
reader. The question of the existence of the reader
is left as an exercise for the second god coefficient.
(A discussion of non-orthogonal, non-integral polytheism
is beyond the scope of this article.)
Apologies to whoever I stole it from.
And remember kids: Never trust a computer you can actually lift.
"American Airlines nominated..." By whom, given that there are no links? The "anonymous reader"? If so, why is it news? Yes, it's interesting that their agreement is so long, but who knows, maybe there are longer ones out there.
The more bloated the agreement is, the more Slashdotters will want to see how ridiculous it is.
So, from (number of people) * (size of agreement), they have an O(n^2) bandwidth cost to their site.
Donate background CPU time to fight cancer.
Airmail, anyone?
" O. Take any action that will or could impose an unreasonable or disproportionately large load on our site infrastructure." :( I'm pretty sure the /.'ing qaulifies :X
...by a long shot. Check out their service agreement. A whopping 237 paragraphs, 31,999 words, and 202,556 characters.
cause it's AA. and we know RIAA and MPAA are evil, so AA must be the root of all evil
"Teachers leave us kids alone
I only read as far as "By using the Site, you represent and warrant that you are 18 years of age or older and possess the legal right and ability to enter into this Agreement..." before my brain exploded and I had to go out the back and install a spare.
/> bugger there goes another one.
So, am I to understand that by using the site I agree that I am legally allowed to agree to this agreement? <fx src="explode.wav"
The lawyers who wrote this crap are clearly a waste of valuable oxygen, water, energy and trace elements.
Once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more, Or close the wall up with our American dead!
Does DDoSing their site violate their EULA? (-:
No really. With a *strict* EULA like that, wich no person with any sense at all would ever agree to, it really can't be accounted for as wasting their bandwidth or resources. More like saving potential customers the time it takes to read crap like this.
Not Buzzword 2.0 compliant. Please speak english.
Unless you have some magic printer-ready toilet paper the results of that could be pretty ghastly.
sig.
" O. Take any action that will or could impose an unreasonable or disproportionately large load on our site infrastructure."
Just search the text for "your first born", "RIAA" or "pass your email address on to third parties". If no matches, it's probably alright...
Code, Hardware, stuff like that.
Somewhere in the middle, you start to see interesting things included in the text. In the 87th paragraph there is a rather delicious sushi recipe, in the 90th paragraph, a Seinfeld quote, and in the 92nd, it said "Have you read this far, I'll buy you a Big Mac". Not many people have noticed this because it's quite the enormous mass of text.
I have lots of miles on AA and I refuse to sign that disclaimer. As a result I have to use their call center to get at my AA Advantage account. I've made several complaints about the language in the disclaimer, including a letter to the Chairman. All of them have been shrugged off without a substantive reply. My next step is going to be to concentrate on building up miles on another airline. Signing that agreement is simply not an option.
I clicked on the "I do not accept" button and it took me right to a page to book reservations or check the status of my frequent flyer miles (I have none with AA). Many web sites stop you dead in your tracks for refusing a EULA, but apparently, American is more concerned with getting your paid business than your behavior. I guess their lawyers have a lot of time on their hands.
The PayPal Agreement is 373 paragraphs, 19,127 words, 119,761 characters.
Stop-Prism.org: Opt Out of Surveillance
I mean you could accidentally hit 'I agree'.
That's ridiculous. I mean, it takes a concerted effort to click "accept", and...
Oh wait, pop-up ads on the onther browser windows,...
Uh oh. Damn.
Forget what I said. I just signed my soul away to American Airlines.
Mod Karma -1: I sed bad wurds. If I cep my mouf shut, I wud be at riyses.
How refreshing it is to see a link that still responds, even when slashdotted...
The most common word in the EULA is 'or'. (There were more commas, but I don't count that as a word)
'Or' was used 186 times (4.86% of all words and special characters (eg. punctuation, comma)) in their
EULA. Comma was used 348 times. (8.53%)
So for all you EULA writers out there... use a lot of 'or' and commas in the text... just to make sure you
can protect your site against the evil customers and other evil visitors.
Everybody does know that this is an enduser agreement for their frequent flier program, and not for their website, right?
It's clearly marked there, and if you click on "I Do Not Agree" you are taken to the main page of their website to place your order--no fuss, no muss.
I'm not arguing that some of their terms aren't ridiculous--but this agreement's length is not to block people from the main site, but probably to keep people from abusing their frequent flier program.
Did everyone just tear into the legalese immediately, w/o reading anything else?
I clicked "I do not accept" and it appears to have let me in anyway. Maybe the EULA is optional?
Pavlov wouldn't be so famous if he'd used a can opener instead of a bell.
They tried to hold me to the terms of this agreement even though I never saw it or agreed to it.
I was selling Kellogg's AAdvantage coupons that I had cut off cereal boxes on ebay. Somebody from American sent me a threatening letter telling me I was in violation of the terms of use of the AAdvantage program. They also sent a letter to my bidders who backed out of the auction on threat of having their AAdvantage accounts terminated.
When I responded to their original email asking how they can enforce a penalty against me if I never signed up for AAdvantage, they never responded.
Since then, I have continued to sell AAdvantage coupons on ebay in private auctions so American Airlines can't hassle my buyers.
You must be over 18.
Actually, I read about one big ERP ( IIRC ) company having to choose some specific place as their corporate HQ -- they'd run a hierarchy-on-demand system with no HQ, but that wasn't acceptable to the IRS.
'read that in "Corps Business: the 30 Management Principles of the US Marines" ( David H Freedman, and it's an excellent book )
Messages to/for me ( in me journal )
They finally got beaten... :( :( :( :(
--- I am known for the ones who want to find me on the net. Is that a privacy risk or a privilege? One might wonder..
And if you click 'I do not accept', it still directs you to their Reservation page. I have... reservations aboot that.
You know, the more I think about this, the more I like it. Economic theory states that the capitalist system breaks down if there is asymmetry of information. For example, if a car dealer knows he's selling you a lemon, which is why we have anti-fraud laws and the like. Lawyers create an asymmetry of information too, though, because a corporation can afford to have lawyers look at every document they draft or sign, but the average citizen cannot. Often the result is the creation of the onerous "agreements" which essentially state, if you'll pardon the old joke, "all your base are belong to us." People agree anyway, because they don't have the time or ability to check other companies to compare agreements, and see which is the least restrictive. So, if this reduced the ability of corporations to abuse this superior information, I think it'd be great.
"The question of whether a computer can think is no more interesting than that of whether a submarine can swim" -EWD
It would be one thing were this EULA on, say, www.irs.gov and that were the ONLY way to file your taxes, but...
This is on AAvantage, one of many ways to book airline flights online.
If you DON'T like the EULA, screw'em! Go elsewhere. Find one of the 1E100 other travel agents online, and use them.
Also, send a polite but firm letter (NOT EMAIL - real dead trees and toner!) to American Airlines, telling them WHY you are taking your purchase to Marges_travel.com.
IF AA sees that this EULA costs them more than it saves them, THEN (they will change it OR they will go out of business).
www.eFax.com are spammers
Since all EULAs pretty much has the same goal in mind, here is a simpler version:
In purchasing, pirating or using this product you have lost all your rights. All your bases belong to us.
Jumpstart the tartan drive.
> What freaks me out is the possibility that
> this very clause is deemed illegal by a court
> - now that's where it gets really interesting
nice try at a Hofstadter-style self-reference loop. In this case however, if that clause is deemed illegal, the contract would be invalidated since the only thing preventing it's invalidation had been itself invalidated.
lysergically yours
IANANAL (I am not anal) but I'm pretty sure it already invalidates a contract to include illegal requirements. All that remains to do is declare that the statement "Illegal parts of this contract are removed" illegal, and the whole thing collapses.
And yes, I agree about the asymmetry of information destroying the free market. That, along with the lack of consideration of those born into a disadvantaged family by no fault of their own, is why I am *not* a libertarian. The libertarian system would require a more informed consumer than is feasible, particularly when information would be more easily concealed with the suggested greater freedom.
Just type this URL into your address bar while viewing the disclaimer:
javascript:for (i=0; t=document.getElementsByTagName ("textarea")[i]; ++i) void(t.readOnly=false)
Then you can delete all the text, change all the vowels to o's, or do whatever you do with annoying contracts in real life.
You can even keep this URL as a "bookmarklet" on your personal toolbar and click it whenever you need to edit a read-only textarea.
The shareholder is always right.
...and nobody understood a word that it said, but we all had fun filling out forms and playing with the penciles on the bench there...
This is a breath of fresh air. I wish more sites would emulate this...
Someone else mentioned Comb vs. PayPal in passing. That's a very important case, because it directly addresses how far a click-wrap agreement can go. It's not over yet, but in a ruling on an initial motion, a Federal District Court ruled that PayPal's agreement was a contract of adhesion and an unreasonable one. Requiring commercial arbitration in Santa Clara, California and prohibiting class actions was ruled to be unconscionable. PayPal is fighting this.
The Yahoo Instant Messenger agreement is presented to you in a 2-inch-square window, with no option to print the agreement. If you copy the text out, you find that the agreement is 14 pages long, 7,219 words, 44,847 characters in length. Reading this agreement in the original window would require about 1,000 page-down clicks and probably take the average person a significant fraction of an hour to complete (and would not be a pleasant experience).
How can this be enforcable?
G.
Breaking copyright law! Unless, of course...you didn't click on the ACCEPT link. Hmmm.....
Awk! Pieces of eight. Pieces of eight. Pieces of seven... ERROR: General Protection Fault. [Paroty Error.]
Offer valid in 49 states. Sorry, Tennessee.
I wonder if posting the link on slashdot is in violation of this paragraph..
You must get a lot of laughs then, because I've seen that clause in a LOT of online and offline agreements.
That's because it's a standard severability clause. So far as I know, it should be in all contracts.
"We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
This Agreement constitutes the entire agreement governing your access to, dealings with, and use of the Site. Of course, separate agreements may attach to any goods, products, or services you obtain, purchase, or use from the Site.
Because the main body did not have enough space?
"The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
"You must get a lot of laughs then, because I've seen that clause in a LOT of online and offline agreements. Basically if the law says a particular clause doesn't hold up in court the rest isn't invalid. IANAL of course so I can't say how legal that position is."
I'd bet it is legal. The US Governments non disclosure agreement for vieing classified material-Valid for 50 years for normal stuff, 70 for SCI(super sensitive information with sources detailed)- has the same clause. I doubt the CIA which developed the agreement would have put that in there if it wouldn't actually help.
Thank you for visiting the American Airlines web site titled "aa.com" (the "Site").
Well, I didn't visit 'aa.com' . I most definatley visited 'www.aa.com'... so right off the bat we have a bad contract.
I hit "I do not accept" and it walked me right through. Maybe they should spend the money on programmers instead of fucking skunk lawyers.
It didn't take me long to find longer T&Cs. I just went to Google and searched for "Terms and Conditions", which of course is not going to find those agreements that are called by a different name.
Anyway, the very first one I found was longer than American Airlines', and the second was WAY longer.
1) ICQ: 31,969 characters
2) Lycos 88,220 characters (dude!)
Anyway, here's a summary of about five minutes worth of work. I started to get sick to my stomach and quit after that:
This is `wc -c` output:
6991 tucows.txt
11292 dell.txt
11635 att.txt
13467 ge.txt
22585 american_airlines.txt
31969 icq.txt
88220 lycos.txt
I don't care what they choose to write, that has no bearing on my obligations. I can say on my web site that you owe me a million bucks. Would you pay up? Go on say "yah".
All web site disclaimers say the company can change the text as they please (but some say without notification/notice and some say they will notify you by 30 days.)
Yes.
All agreements say if one part is invalid, the rest is still valid.
Yes.
All agreements say you are responsible for taxes and anything that happens to you from using their services.
Yes.
Each of your points is correct (for sufficiently loose interpretations of the word 'all').
I'm not really sure what points of mine you're trying to respond to here -- what I'm trying to point out here is that this agreement appears to explicitly say: "By clicking here now, you agree to be bound in the future by whatever we choose to write in this space, forever." And it does appear to be forever, too -- I couldn't find a clause in the agreement which explains how you could get yourself out of this agreement if they changed the terms against your liking.
I do tend to read these agreements, or at least skim them, when they are important to me, and I've never encountered language like that before.
If you still insist that such wording is standard in online service usage agreements, perhaps you could provide a link or two.
Living better through chemicals
Looking through that particular ruling, it only rules on the particular matter of binding arbitration in Santa Clara county. It's a fairly involved ruling, and does set the precident that a EULA can be considered an "inconscionable" (sp?) contract, rendering some sections unenforcable.
At the core, the ruling says that EULAs are like any other contract, and fall under standard contract law. There are rules that contracts have to abide by (for instance, it cannot be wholly one-sided; both parties must benefit).
With all that said, IANAL.
...programmers should submit all legal correspondence in ... Perl...
:-)
If we did that, it would just as unreadable as the legalese itself!