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Netflix Terms of Service Invalidates Your Right To Sue

New submitter ebombme writes "Netflix has decided to go the route of AT&T and others by trying to take away the rights of their users to form class action lawsuits against them. A copy of the new terms of use states 'These Terms of Use provide that all disputes between you and Netflix will be resolved by BINDING ARBITRATION. YOU AGREE TO GIVE UP YOUR RIGHT TO GO TO COURT to assert or defend your rights under this contract (except for matters that may be taken to small claims court). Your rights will be determined by a NEUTRAL ARBITRATOR and NOT a judge or jury and your claims cannot be brought as a class action. Please review the Arbitration Agreement below for the details regarding your agreement to arbitrate any disputes with Netflix.'"

19 of 206 comments (clear)

  1. Not legal. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Next question.

    1. Re:Not legal. by iamgnat · · Score: 4, Informative

      Really? I must have missed the repeal of the Seventh Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

      Not a repeal, but a sound gutting:

  2. Irrelevant for the normal consumer by FaxeTheCat · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The values i a Netflix subscription is just too small for a normal person to engage in a lawsuit. Even a class action suit would be off little value (look at history - only lawyers get any real money out of it). The real power for the subscribers is to stop the subscription. And you do not need to sue or go to arbitration over that.
    And of course, if they give bad service it is far more efficient to slashdot them over it than to sue anyway.

    1. Re:Irrelevant for the normal consumer by jonsmirl · · Score: 5, Informative

      That's the real problem. The only winner in these class actions is the lawyers. They get $20M. The consumers get coupons and the service raises their price to collect the $20M and give it the lawyers.

      I got a check for $0.02 in a mortgage case when the class action lawyer took home $65M. Funny how the account servicing fee went up $0.10 a month after that. Probably cost me over $20 to recover that $0.02 I had been "cheated" out of.

    2. Re:Irrelevant for the normal consumer by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The values i a Netflix subscription is just too small for a normal person to engage in a lawsuit.

      What if Netflix leaked your private information, including credit card, and decided to hide the fact for months until you are the victim of identity theft that takes years of aggravation to clean up? Is that enough value to seek a legal remedy?

  3. Re:What other legal rights can they get you to wai by Hatta · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In the US it's common to take someones life and/or liberty because of their pursuit of happiness.

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  4. Not irrelevant at all by drinkypoo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    There is more motivation than getting paid back in a lawsuit; there is also the goal of causing a company to change its behavior. And the threat of a lawsuit tends to mitigate their bad behavior preemptively; it's obviously not guaranteed to work, but it probably does help.

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  5. Re:yep by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Completely enforceable in the US.

    US Supreme Court ruled that binding arbitration agreements are legal and enforceable.

    Still, not news, as every company will soon have this clause.

  6. Re:yep by russotto · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Right, because the law explicitly makes arbitration legal. (See "Federal Arbitration Act"). The courts don't want to have to deal with actually providing justice (or even injustice) to pissants like us; better to fob us off on a "neutral" arbitrator hired by the other party who can deal out injustice without bothering the judges.

  7. Re:if they break the law... by History's+Coming+To · · Score: 4, Informative

    In the UK you can't sign away your statutory rights. If I sign a contract saying I won't sue for negligence and the company are negligent, then I can sue and the judge will probably see the contract as a minus point for the defendant/s.

    Example - my landlord can put a clause in the rent contract saying he is not responsible for the safety of animals (reasonable, as I live on a farm), but he can't get out of a statutory obligation such as ensuring electrical safety in the premises, no matter what I sign.

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  8. Re:yep by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So... is anyone going to provide a citation instead of just shouting that the other person is wrong?

  9. Re:yep by Tsian · · Score: 5, Informative

    This blog discusses the case and its ramifications briefly

    Significance: Under this Supreme Court ruling, consumer contracts that require binding arbitration and prohibit participation in classwide arbitration are allowable.
    http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/banking/2011/05/us-supreme-court-okays-binding-arbitration-clauses-prohibiting-consumers-from-joining-class-actions.html

  10. Re:USA, by Spiked_Three · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Mod him up. I live here (the US) and I agree. The US is becoming a joke to me too.

    Another fine example, DirecTV has over 30,000 consumer complaints AND had an injunction filed against them in 2009 for deceptive business practices. And they have changed absolutely nothing in their business model. They still lie, bait and switch, refuse to allow you to cancel, then claim on TV they have the highest customer satisfaction rating.

    Life in the US is about dodging ripoffs from large corporations, co-sponsored by the government that encourages it. There used to be a certain amount of good faith expected in business, that is gone completely. Investors demand more profit, and don't care who gets ripped off to get it. That is the entire problem. The founders of capitalism warned if the rich got too powerful the system would fail - and it is, but the rich will not let you know that.

    Look at it another way (if it is not obvious); You are being required to give up the Constitution in order to watch a movie in a way that is convenient to you. Are you living in the United States of america or some warlord run African tribe? Sure we have choice in America, paper or plastic? George Carlin said it in the 90s. Other than our grocery bags, little else is left up to us (In Seattle, plastic grocery bags become illegal starting in June :| )

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  11. Re:yep by russotto · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Arbitration doesn't work like this (at least where I come from). There are 3 arbitrators, one yours, one from them and one neutral, as in, agreed by both parties. So the "neutral" should be neutral. And even if it is only one, it should still be agreed by both.

    You might go to an arbitrator once or twice in your lifetime. These companies deal with them all the time. That means every arbitrator has no incentive to keep you happy and every incentive to keep the other side -- their repeat customers -- happy.

    Unlike most people, I do believe that most claims should be decided like this. Decisions would be speedier, there would be no legal system to abuse because you have more money and power than the common joe...

    Yes, decisions would be speedier all right.

    Most people don't know what arbitration is... That's why they complain. It is actually a common clause in contracts between giant companies - and believe me, none of them want to lose money.

    Giant companies can use arbitration effectively because they're already similarly situated.

  12. IAAL and it IS unenforceable by PDG · · Score: 5, Informative

    The AT&T case was unique in that the SCOTUS overrode a CA statute that was OVERLY generous to consumers (and completely unfair to businesses) and said the arbitration clause was valid. MA on the other hand will toss out such a clause (as they did in the Dell case) as it simply stripped a consumer's right to the court. So I repeat, the AT&T does NOT validate all arbitration clauses, all it did was invalidate enforcement of a CA statute that was superceded by the Fed Arbitration Action.

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  13. Re:yep by russotto · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You're forgetting that the decision on an arbitrator has to be agreed by both parties. If you feel you're getting the short end of the stick, simply don't agree to him and another one needs to be found.

    How, as a consumer, am I to know anything about the arbitrator? I don't have a legal department to research these things. And in any case, all arbitrator are similarly situated -- they all hear a lot of cases where the plaintiff is J. Random Consumer who they'll never see again, and a few massive companies who they'll see again and again and again.

    Your assumption that every arbitrator in the country will be corrupt is the reason why there is no progress and the courts are jammed.

    It's not that every arbitrator in the country is corrupt. It's that the process is such that the arbitrator's interests naturally favor the corporation. If an arbitrator gets the reputation of being too consumer-friendly, the corporations (who can research these things) will stop agreeing to him and he's out of a job. If an arbitrator gets the reputation of always agreeing with the corporation, most consumers won't even know about it, and those few who do find out aren't significant enough to matter.

    In any case, deciding disputes is the civil courts' JOB. If they can't do it, why the heck do we even have them?

  14. Re:yep by digitalaudiorock · · Score: 5, Informative

    Yup...and I can't for the life of me figure out how that jives with the 7 th Amendment: "In Suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a jury, shall be otherwise re-examined in any Court of the United States, than according to the rules of the common law." Seems pretty clear to me.

  15. Re:yep by dgatwood · · Score: 4, Informative

    You are correct. What the GP was thinking of is called "mediation". Binding arbitration means that you agree to abide by the decision.

    Worse, binding arbitration means that you lose the right to sue over afterwards. Once arbitration begins, your right to sue is gone. This is why binding arbitration should be limited to minor disputes over small sums of money. If that's not what you're dealing with, you are always better off getting a lawyer and going to court, challenging the binding arbitration clause as unconscionable.

    At least in the state of California, mandatory binding arbitration clauses in contracts of adhesion (e.g. the Netflix contract) are almost always found to be unconscionable. Unfortunately, the recent Supreme Court decision undid all this, reversing some thirty years of fairly consistent case law in the name of federal preemption. At this point, the only way to get back our right to sue is to demand that Congress pass laws fixing this heinous abuse of justice.

    Mandatory binding arbitration clauses in contracts of adhesion are way beyond unconscionable. They are a fundamental abrogation of the legal principles upon which this country was founded. The justices who made this decision should be ashamed of themselves for putting the profits of big corporations above the public's right to not get screwed by them.

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  16. Re:yep by i-like-burritos · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yup...and I can't for the life of me figure out how that jives with the 7 th Amendment: "In Suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a jury, shall be otherwise re-examined in any Court of the United States, than according to the rules of the common law." Seems pretty clear to me.

    The Constitution is like the Bible. It's supposedly sacred and infallible, but It's not meant to be taken literally and you have to let the courts interpret it for you (in the context of their own personal interests). As time passes, more and more of it gets flat-out ignored, and eventually it will only ever be read as an academic exercise by historians.