6/18/2026 at 9:53:29 PM
I'm glad it all worked out for this individual. I hope more people live their lives like this as the dystopia progresses.Unfortunately, especially in the US, exercising your rights, or even just reading every paper you're expected to put your name to, not only constantly pisses people off for some reason, but also puts you at a significant disadvantage compared to the people that never push back in the interest of not making waves, or even because "whatever it's fine."
by engeljohnb
6/19/2026 at 2:02:07 AM
Went to a new doctor. As part of the check-in process, I was asked to "sign" a little digital pad, so, as I was told, they could properly use my insurance. I asked to see the hard copy of what I was signing and they couldn't find one. Then, for some reason, they were unable to print one. I gave up and scribbled my sig with my finger and then was seen by a doctor. It's maddening.by cheese_van
6/19/2026 at 3:01:03 AM
I'm sure someone smarter than me has a solution. Those papers you're required to sign are generally the result of regulation. Some law got passed that say "you can't share info unless you get signed permission". The person dreaming up the law thought that would be enough to stop getting them to share info. But, even if they cared about privacy, they don't want to increase all their expenses and run their own IT department so they contract out for 3rd party billing, 3rd party document infra, etc etc. Like if they wanted to store your appointment in MS Word 365 or Google Docs, suddenly the regulation kicks in. They're not going build a document sharing platform to get their job done just so they can meet the regs. They're just going to get you to sign that they can do what they need.As one example, I went to a doctor, he ordered an x-ray. I went over to the x-ray company then back to my doctor. He pulled up the x-ray immediately. He's only able to do that because I signed that he can share my info with the x-ray company and visa-versa.
Again, I don't have a solution. No regulation = he'd probably share my data. But regulation = he gets me to sign so he can legit provide the service, and still shared my data (Because I signed). So all the regs did is make visiting the doctor more annoying, and add $$$$ to push all the paperwork around.
by socalgal2
6/19/2026 at 3:50:10 AM
Regarding information sharing, not quite. Covered entities (term of art in HIPAA), which include providers (and also payers!) including both the lab and your doctor, do not need your permission to share information between them for the purposes of treatment, payment, or operations (commonly, "TPO"). A BAA between a covered entity and a vendor (like an EHR or PACS [viewer for your imaging]) also does not require any patient consent.There are sometimes things you might not like hidden in the releases you're signing, beyond the run of the mill acceptance of financial responsibility / assignment of benefits, notice of privacy policy acknowledgment, consent to treat.
by ihodes
6/19/2026 at 3:44:38 PM
> do not need your permission to share information between them for the purposes of treatment, payment, or operations (commonly, "TPO")In fact, for the purposes of treatment, providers can share that information, even if you explicitly refuse, as needed.
by FireBeyond
6/19/2026 at 3:39:29 AM
> They're not going build a document sharing platform to get their job done just so they can meet the regs.What is so hard in respecting the spirit of the law?
by ghssds
6/19/2026 at 3:45:46 AM
There are many dollars in between.by throw1234567891
6/19/2026 at 3:50:37 AM
Like with criminal fraud?by cwmoore
6/19/2026 at 3:55:08 AM
Becauae "spirit of the law" doesnt exist. It is a saying used by people when they want to do something that isnt in the law. You dont see lawyers, judges or law makers use the phrase.by sandworm101
6/19/2026 at 1:19:55 PM
> Becauae "spirit of the law" doesnt exist. It is a saying used by people when they want to do something that isnt in the law. You dont see lawyers, judges or law makers use the phrase.This is dependent on jurisdiction. Some countries (e.g. the USA) do not consider spirit/intent (anymore), as the judiciary has repeatedly ruled that the letter of the law, as written, is what matters, regardless of whether it meets the intent of what the law was written to achieve.
There are other countries in the world, outside of the USA, that do not work this way.
by oarsinsync
6/19/2026 at 3:07:53 PM
Intent is expressed through drafter's notes or explanations. "Spirit" is somerhing else, something made up later by people who had nothing to do with th3 creation of the law.by sandworm101
6/19/2026 at 5:02:23 PM
> The letter of the law and the spirit of the law are two ways of interpreting rules or laws. To obey the "letter of the law" is to follow the literal reading of the words of the law, whereas following the "spirit of the law" is to follow the intention of why the law was enacted.by Telaneo
6/19/2026 at 5:25:06 PM
It is always a good sign of modernity and relevance when the half an article's citations are to either the bible or the Talmude. And who can forget the legal touchstone that was the 1975 Systems Engineering Conference ... in Vegas.by sandworm101
6/19/2026 at 5:30:32 PM
The only relevant part there was the definition, which I quoted to you. If you prefer a different one, have this one.> the spirit of the law - noun phrase
> the aim or purpose of a law when it was written
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/the%20spirit%20of...
by Telaneo
6/19/2026 at 4:51:48 AM
Yes they obviously do use it?by dgellow
6/19/2026 at 5:41:21 AM
I agree but please, provide citations instead of a question mark, to make what you believe is obvious actually in fact obvious.by cwmoore
6/19/2026 at 5:15:34 PM
> New combinations of circumstances — that is, new cases — constantly call for the application, which means in truth the extension of old principles; or, it may be, even for the thinking out of some new principle, in harmony with the general spirit of the law, fitted to meet the novel requirements of the time.Law And Public Opinion In England, page 361 -> https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.40146/page/n38...
by Telaneo
6/19/2026 at 11:32:11 AM
I think the question mark is good enough for such an absurd claim. If the author cares they can find quotes with no effortby dgellow
6/20/2026 at 8:20:28 AM
I don't think so?by allarm
6/19/2026 at 2:32:02 PM
I don’t see any?by cwmoore
6/19/2026 at 9:25:04 AM
Are you even legally signing anything if they can't show you the document you are signing?I am not familiar with the nitty gritty of US law, but under German law that signature would be worthless. Even signing a document you have but are unwilling to read is legally a bit iffy (which is why for things like real estate a notary will read the paperwork to you and ask if you understood it, or why surprising clauses in terms of service are unenforceable). Signing something without being able to know what you are signing would be worth exactly nothing, because you didn't actually knowingly consent to any particular thing, and neither did you have the "meeting of minds" required to form a contract.
by wongarsu
6/19/2026 at 5:19:33 PM
It probably would be unenforceable in the US too, given you have no opportunity to know what you're signing, but you'd probably have to drag it before a court to settle that, and US companies know that no* individual is actually going to do that over what ultimately is (likely to only be) a minor inconvenience.* Within margin of error
by Telaneo
6/20/2026 at 2:47:45 AM
[dead]by exogenousdata
6/19/2026 at 5:21:18 AM
Many people now have devices with secure storage with them at all times. Maybe it’s time we owned our data and decided who gets it and when.Obviously this doesn’t work in all situations and for all people, but it’s a start.
by jonhohle
6/19/2026 at 6:33:03 AM
I do wish this was an option for some data, but emergency care would be an absolute shit show. People can't even remember passwords let alone keep track of keys and devices.by goosejuice
6/19/2026 at 10:36:21 AM
Zero trust device, with emergency channels pre-trusted. Like, the ambulance service is known to your device and can already suck your blood type and whatnot. And the police your name and emergency contacts. Or whatever schema with a similar idea. There's the technology to do this already, but we're lacking awareness and initiative.by soco
6/19/2026 at 1:42:03 PM
> And the police your name and emergency contacts.Hell no. The fuzz ain't getting my info without reasonable, articulable suspicion that I have committed, am committing, or am about to commit a crime, or if I'm pressing charges and need to ID for that process.
by filoeleven
6/19/2026 at 2:00:19 PM
The parent comment was about an accident where you're unable to give any details yourself. Maybe when you're under a truck you'd like your folks to know what happened to you, right? But again, such are implementation details. First let's have that zero trust device, then we can be negotiate who gets to see what and when.by soco
6/19/2026 at 2:50:50 PM
The problem is that it creates a vector for illicit access to the information, and if that vector exists, it will be abused.I'd rather have society deal with the problems that come with not knowing who's under the truck than the problems that come with state surveillance.
by miyoji
6/19/2026 at 4:35:42 PM
I had a similar experience at a bank some time ago. To sign up, you had to sign a digital pad without seeing what you were signing first. You could get a copy mailed to you later. At that future time, I was told, you could you cancel the agreement if you found it objectionable.Being a bank, this has nothing to do with HIPAA. Just a dark pattern.
by comfysocks
6/19/2026 at 2:49:56 PM
What's interesting about those documents you asked to sign, at least at hospitals, it's not a requirement even though it may appear that way by the interaction. I suspect it's the same for other medical professions as well.by trinsic2
6/19/2026 at 3:45:55 PM
Many of them are just "CYA" for the facility/provider. HIPAA allows, for example, providers to share your medical information, for the purposes of treatment, regardless of your consent.by FireBeyond
6/19/2026 at 10:32:00 AM
Usually, signing things like this won’t particularly hurt you - largely because your inalienable rights are… inalienable. You can’t sign them away, even if some contract says you have.The flip side of this however is that it’s a very worthwhile pursuit to know consumer protections and what your rights are in the jurisdiction in which you live - and how to enforce them.
Where I live, I unfortunately quite frequently find myself having to go “ok so you want to do the formal process with the regulator then?”, which usually gets them to reconsider - but not always. Three times in the last month I have threatened regulatory action - and of those three, only one chose that path. I have just reported a government agency here to the domestic and EU regulators for failing to fulfil EU FoM treaty rights - and they were even kind enough to put it in writing that they’re ignoring their own domestic laws.
I have yet to lose a case I have brought before a regulator or justice of the peace, and businesses usually only need to do this once, if at all, as it can quite quickly turn a €1,000 dispute into tens or hundreds of thousands of euro of damages and fines. By doing this, following these processes through, I help not just myself but society as a whole.
So - sign away, but have teeth, and know where to bite.
by madaxe_again
6/19/2026 at 12:24:26 PM
In general, in the US of A, that consent you sign waives your legislated-to-be-guaranteed HIPAA rights.Specifically, you're typically giving the office's providers and their marketing "affiliates" and your insurance company and its marketing "affiliates" the right to forward around (through any length chains of agreements) your entire medical history associated with enough (research proven as de-anonymizing) details to retarget you personally. And you're typically doing this by accepting a company insurance (in the US) or the provider's reception counter while you're in need of care.
This effectively forced consent is arguably illegal, but as far as I know, untested, so it's standard across the medical system and across omnibus insurance (e.g. company-provided healthcare "plan").
Of course, every touch point is another place your personal history will get stolen and rolled into modern digitally scripted exploitation of your identity and or targeted forms of phish-mongering (a term I made up meaning marketing so personalized you believe it's necessary to sign up for and pay for).
If you have any relationship with the team at your company that procures employee insurance packages, see if you can persuade them to start with the firm's insurance consultant (high end) or broker (low end) and systematically remove every step in the "we can pass along all your info to our affiliates for our own pinky-swear good reasons like making more money off your private info" chain.
In our experience, this added 3+ months to the procurement process as every single provider balked until interacted with by counsel -- and then instantly capitulated.
Our goal was always to give our employees a top tier benefits package, and we consider it a top tier hard-to-match employee benefit to not have random firms and government agencies pawing through your doctors notes, prescription histories, lab results, and enough biographical data to fake your digital twin.
Sadly, most employees -- though none of them are sheeple -- shrug at that for reasons in this thread: no time to fight such pervasive exploitation, especially when it hits them while needing a service as it hit you, or just plain weary of trying. So much easier, and psychically healthier, to just avoid thinking about it. Everyone is resigned.
If a company you consider working for claims "we take your privacy seriously" ask if they got privacy waivers removed on your behalf from all vendor contracts including payroll (does your salary go to 'work number'?) and insurance providers (can your data leave your doctor's EMR?). Odds are, they do not, in fact, take your privacy as seriously as they could.
by Terretta
6/18/2026 at 10:10:23 PM
Once I rented an apartment in US, and the documents said that they can make videos, pictures and audio recordings of me and my family, and use it for their own purposes including commercial. I objected, but their position was that no one is going to involve legal department for me, and I am free to go away.by deepsun
6/19/2026 at 2:45:35 AM
Rentals are exactly what I was talking about. Supposedly you can always go to someone else, but we all know in practice we can't just go without housing and if everyone decides you're "difficult," you're SOL.Earlier this week a potential landlord offered me a lease saying I had already inspected the property and found no issues with it.
I asked for a chance to actually inspect before signing, and even said I would settle for a good quality video walkthrough. They told me the unit was "not available for viewing" because it wasn't finished yet, and by the time it was finished it would likely be taken.
So why did you ask me to sign a contract saying I inspected a property that it's conceptually impossible to inspect??
I asked if they could change that part of the lease. They said they were "unable" due to "demand and interest in the property."
Of course, still not as insane as your story.
by engeljohnb
6/19/2026 at 6:05:32 PM
I rather like the system where I live in BC, Canada where things like this cannot be waived, and the government has more or less standardized things like move in/move out inspections through standard forms. You are, of course, allowed to use your own form, but if it doesn't have all of the elements needed to make an inspection form legal it is toilet paper. No reason not to use the official and free form.Even then, if they got you to sign this paper saying you had inspected it, but they had not made it available for inspection and pressured you to sign or lose it, the inspection would be void as far as the tribunal that handles disputes goes. If they forced you to sign an inspection report for a unit that was not complete at the time of signing it would be open and shut as an invalid inspection. The tribunal here won't allow any claim for property damages if there is not a valid move in inspection, so it really behooves the property owner to make sure the inspection is valid if they want any damages paid for.
by dghlsakjg
6/19/2026 at 4:59:21 AM
> I asked if they could change that part of the lease. They said they were "unable" due to "demand and interest in the property."Was it a paper lease? Because you could always cross out that section before signing, not to mention write in your own addendum. They would probably still balk, but you'd be within your rights to do so.
by kmoser
6/19/2026 at 6:40:11 AM
And it would be within the landlord’s right to move on to the next renter in their queue.by voakbasda
6/19/2026 at 6:36:03 AM
Good luck finding a landlord that would agree to your terms.by goosejuice
6/19/2026 at 1:43:55 PM
Much easier to find one that won't notice the markup, though. You think they read the contracts any more carefully than most people?by filoeleven
6/19/2026 at 2:41:20 PM
As long as they responded in writing, you have proof that the other party agrees the clause is false.I wonder if a judge would keep that clause in the contract in case of litigation.
by aand16
6/19/2026 at 4:34:31 AM
Sounds like typical high pressure salesmanship.by fluoridation
6/19/2026 at 3:49:34 PM
For separate but similar reasons, Washington was forced to add to tenant law the proviso that tenants could not waive certain tenant rights, even if consideration was given."There's a clause in here that gives some more time for certain repairs, because we're short-staffed, so we will take $50 off of your rent". Nope.
"There's a clause in here that says that your monthly payment will first be applied to late payments, fees, fines, and then your lease payment in that order." Nope.
by FireBeyond
6/18/2026 at 10:20:44 PM
Pretty sure that's a violation of fundamental human rights as it's your place of living. Surely that can't be legal, even in the US can it?by smcleod
6/18/2026 at 10:23:31 PM
It doesn’t mean _inside_ the apartment. It means if they decide to film a commercial and you’re walking your dog in the background, they don’t have to ask you.by monkpit
6/18/2026 at 11:11:15 PM
That sounds a lot like a rationalization desperately grasping at "surely it's not as insane as it sounds, what it _must_ mean is ... "I would want to read and perhaps get legal advice before relying on that interpretation - and before finding I signed over rights to my landlord to make candid porn of me and all his other tenants.
by bigiain
6/19/2026 at 1:14:15 AM
Am pretty sure he's right. I rent out my house, and it is very illegal for the landlord to record video inside the house (or even of the driveway). You are infringing the privacy of your tenants and is a huge no-no.Yeah, if you accidentally recorded families walking through their homes unclothed, this could land a landlord in jail.
by computerdork
6/19/2026 at 1:54:38 AM
The contract terms could very well have actually had a meaning that included filming inside the apartment. The existence of other laws overriding the contract isn't actually the same thing as the contract not having that invasive meaning.by wtallis
6/19/2026 at 3:56:29 PM
You can’t make a contract that breaks the law, it doesn’t work that way. It’s unenforceable and doesn’t hold up in court.Otherwise, you could just make contracts anytime you wanted to break the law for any reason.
by monkpit
6/19/2026 at 4:08:50 AM
Contracts don't and can't override laws.by somenameforme
6/19/2026 at 9:29:06 AM
But if laws can override contracts (which presumably they can), then contracts can appear to establish permissions/restrictions that are illegal. At least one contract I've signed includes something about the rest being enforceable if any part of it isn't enforceable. Perhaps that helps to contain actual mistakes, but I assume employers use it to persuade employees that they're bound by illegal non-compete clauses, for example.by lambertsimnel
6/19/2026 at 10:47:34 AM
> At least one contract I've signed includes something about the rest being enforceable if any part of it isn't enforceable.Which is funny, because if it worked like that - that any unenforceable demand in it made the whole thing invalid - then presumably the clause asserting the opposite would also be invalid.
by vintermann
6/19/2026 at 10:48:40 AM
No it means that if parts of a contract are found to be unlawful or unenforceable, the rest of the contract still holds.Edit: in other words, you're not legally bound to unlawful parts of a contract.
by RetroTechie
6/19/2026 at 11:14:04 AM
This is my understanding, too. Sorry if that wasn't clear in my earlier comment.However, I also believe that unenforceable parts of a contract have no effect, except in the minds of the parties to that contract. My suspicion is that contracts are sometimes drafted with this in mind.
by lambertsimnel
6/19/2026 at 6:09:30 AM
In normal states not. But there you have the very popular political system called fascism, where contracts override laws.by rurban
6/19/2026 at 7:04:05 AM
That doesn't even make any sense. Fascism is generally about top-down enforced control, whereas contracts are heavily decentralized. The world where you'd have contracts override laws would be some sort of extreme anarcho-libertarian society, which is rather the opposite of fascism.by somenameforme
6/19/2026 at 7:51:58 AM
That's what you heard in school, defending the US style of fascism as "democratic".Fascism was a scheme to keep the old aristocrats turning industrialists to keep control of the state, whilst still keeping it under the democratic name. This was devised in the US in the 30ies and then in the old states also. Heavily supported by the US industrialists. Without them the fascism movement had no chance.
The US scheme of fascism came up with cooperate contracts overriding state laws, also pleasing the Chicago crowd, with decentralized control. At the will of the cooperations, who know better than the government of course. That's why Rockefeller could gun down strikers without any repercussions. That's why the Railroad Commission could call state military to gun down independent oil cooperations which undercut prizes of the industrialists. That's not liberalism, that's pure fascism/cooperatism/aristocratism.
by rurban
6/19/2026 at 9:31:28 AM
That's pretty far from the usual views of fascism. Generally fascism can be seen as a form of right wing collectivism organizing all of society into one big hierarchy, with industrialist somewhat below the top and subservient to political leadership. In a fascist society political decrees override both laws and contracts. This means that fascism is inherently centralized and that what companies receive state support depends on who are political favourites at the moment. E.g. a fascist state might support the independent oil companies if it felt the established industrialists were getting too influential, i.e. classical divide and conquer.By the way, I'm not claiming the things you describe didn't take place for the reasons you claimed. I just don't think it's accurate to describe it as based on fascism.
by sehansen
6/19/2026 at 10:45:41 AM
I call it fascism, even if the US ur-fascist favored the French and German model, over Mussolini. Mussolini was pro-union, and of course all other fascists are contra-union. That's their biggest goal, denying workers rights.But the US implemented all the subsequent fascist governments until today. If in Europe, Asia or Latin America's.
by rurban
6/19/2026 at 9:15:40 AM
"Corporatism" not "cooperatism" though, right?Nothing wrong with cooperatism I think.
by rightbyte
6/19/2026 at 10:42:02 AM
Oops, sureby rurban
6/19/2026 at 9:46:34 AM
> This was devised in the US in the 30iesFascism first evolved in Italy, where Mussolini and his Partito Nazionale Fascista took power in 1922.
by tpm
6/19/2026 at 10:00:57 AM
> before finding I signed over rights to my landlord to make candid porn of me and all his other tenants.If the law says you cannot do XYZ, your landlord can state otherwise in whatever verbiage but that's all void.
This is why good consumer protection laws exist, in a well functioning society there things you sign are to protect the landlord from bad renters (don't pay, cause a nuisance etc). The law in general should protect you as the tenant from a bad landlord.
by hvb2
6/19/2026 at 5:57:52 AM
Well the document didn't say "public spaces". I also think they meant public spaces, but it wasn't in the documents.Even then, I do not consent to work as an unpaid actor even in public spaces. I'm ok to be it at conferences, organized coworking parties -- no problem. But my living space when I don't suspect it -- hell no.
by deepsun
6/19/2026 at 3:55:00 PM
It isn't really that onerous, they aren't expecting you to do anything.Rather, they want the right to film commercially on their own property without getting consent of everyone walking by. Many years ago a local casino was being used for a movie shoot, there were signs at the door saying that they're shooting a movie in here, if you're inside the casino it's possible you'll show up in the background of a shot. By entering you agree to this. An apartment can't do something like that because not entering is not a realistic option, so they're putting it in the rental agreement instead.
by LorenPechtel
6/18/2026 at 11:20:58 PM
If it didn’t say it, it doesn’t mean it.by nkrisc
6/18/2026 at 11:52:30 PM
Thank goodness you read the contract they signed and provided competent legal expertise throughout the process.by gerdesj
6/19/2026 at 2:11:41 AM
That is probably why it is in there, and probably how it would be used in practice. But these types of documents are almost written to be as broad and ask you to give up as many rights as possible.by thayne
6/19/2026 at 4:19:10 AM
It does mean on the property and including inside facilities.Maybe that's at the gym or by the pool, and maybe you're actually not comfortable becoming a swimsuit model.
by aesh2Xa1
6/19/2026 at 5:10:44 PM
That is already allowed.by geon
6/19/2026 at 6:16:02 AM
> It doesn’t meanOh man if I had a pound for every time I've had a corporate dogsbody try to invent meanings of legal wording that doesn't actually exist and gaslight me...
They are usually so passionate about it too. A simple "ah ok cool so you can add that word to the document" really annoys them.
The other classic is just "it's just standard wording". Well yeah McDonald's is also "standard" food for many people but I massively disagree with that too
by gib444
6/18/2026 at 11:08:17 PM
Oh right, that's not so bad. Isn't that just being part of modern society? It would be nice to opt to never be recorded but also, it's outside.by smcleod
6/19/2026 at 12:37:54 AM
I've also read reviews of Greystar properties where the reviewers expressed shock at being forced to consent to such abuse.by abawany
6/18/2026 at 10:19:06 PM
> and I am free to go away.This is the crux of the problem when landlords are allowed to form or join an "association" that gets too pervasive.
This was at the heart of the RealPage lawsuits.
by bsder
6/18/2026 at 11:55:13 PM
I found some shit like that in a gym contract, which I then declined.by plagiarist
6/18/2026 at 10:29:21 PM
This is basic security. Cameras around entrances, exits, and common areas have become critical for safety and preventing mail theft.by m0llusk
6/18/2026 at 10:33:23 PM
There is no version of basic security that extends to commercial use of your likeness in their marketing.Be reasonable.
by collingreen
6/19/2026 at 4:01:00 AM
If it said so in the contract I would not have any issues, something like "recordings of you are available only to authorized security personnel, can be provided to you upon request for a reasonable price covering filtering and other paperwork, and can be shared solely for security and legal purposes".by deepsun
6/18/2026 at 10:57:50 PM
I am that person that reads every line of the contracts I sign, including ToS and PP. I appreciate that I can tell who it rubs the wrong way, because it tells me who will shake my hand without intending to honor their word. It changed the way I write these documents as well, the last ToS and PP I wrote can each be read in a single breath.by uproarchat
6/19/2026 at 12:54:21 AM
How do you manage the situation socially? I had a very important document with a very expensive professional booked for about 10 minutes. No way I could actually read it in that time - what would you do?by anitil
6/19/2026 at 1:14:24 AM
"I appreciate the opportunity to work on this with you, I need to give this the time that it deserves to make sure I can honor the commitments in the contract."Always maintain your integrity, a big part of that is honoring your word. Integrity is the only thing you're born with in this life, and if you're lucky you take it with you on the way out. Any person worth getting into contracts with will appreciate the value in that.
by uproarchat
6/19/2026 at 1:08:14 AM
Not GP, but probably ask them to send me the contract ahead of time, and explain that you need time to read it.by ambicapter
6/19/2026 at 7:45:19 AM
That simply isn't possible - you might like to think you read everything but research has shown that simply reading the terms and conditions of the top 100 websites amounts to a colossal amount of time (if you look at Prof. Lorie Cranor's research on this from around 2008, even back then the cost to the US in lost time was to the tune of trillions of dollars - now, they are much much worse than they were 18 years ago.The terms and conditions for Tetris on Android were longer than the entire works of Tolkien when combined.
So yes, it would be nice to read all of these things, but we simply do not have the time available to do so.
by AlexanderHanff
6/19/2026 at 10:04:30 AM
He did say that he read every contract he signs not that he reads every contract some company thinks applies to him without any legal basis whatsoever. You also don't have to use to top 100 websites.by account42
6/19/2026 at 11:56:39 AM
It would be nice if ToS were more like open source licenses in which people commonly standardize or template them (or parts of them). That way there's large chunks which are reduced, and a few diffs for what's unusual. I think the problem with this is the fact that sections are not independent.by noxvilleza
6/19/2026 at 6:26:10 AM
My wife recently gave birth. When we arrived at the hospital her contractions were close enough together for her to be admitted. They proceeded to give my wife a 10 page or so consent form to sign. I can't imagine anyone reading that. I also can't imagine them not admitting someone over it.by goosejuice
6/18/2026 at 10:00:03 PM
> Unfortunately, especially in the US, exercising your rights, or even just reading every paper you're expected to put your name to, not only constantly pisses people off for some reasonYup. It's particularly sad seeing other people in this very thread talking about how they would "ban this customer for life" just for knowing their rights.
I think it's pathetic that this has become the culture amongst large swathes of Americans - especially ones who consider themselves patriotic. This country was founded in rebellion and the assertion of our rights, and somehow the exact opposite is now the ideal of many citizens now.
by solid_fuel
6/18/2026 at 11:16:31 PM
>I think it's pathetic that this has become the culture amongst large swathes of Americans - especially ones who consider themselves patriotic. This country was founded in rebellion and the assertion of our rights, and somehow the exact opposite is now the ideal of many citizens now.DHS is putting on the domestic terrorists watch list those people who took parts in the protests. Or at minimum threatens to put. And if you google a bit more you'd see that it isn't limited to ICE. Any dissent is perceived by the current government in a similar "terrorism" way. For majority of population that would completely chill any desire to assert rights.
https://www.markey.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/letter_to_dhs_on...
"U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers and senior Trump administration officials have repeatedly suggested that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is building a “domestic terrorists” database comprising information on U.S. citizens protesting ICE’s actions in recent weeks.
...
In recent weeks, DHS personnel and senior officials have repeatedly stated that the agency is engaged in efforts to monitor, catalog, and intimidate individuals engaged in peaceful protests"
by trhway
6/19/2026 at 4:17:27 AM
The current government? Don't let partisanship blind one to how dumb things are. The Occupy Wallstreet protests were extensively surveilled and harassed [1], and it was a vastly more peaceful protest movement. Had it gained more traction there's a 100% chance Obama would've happily greenlit COINTELPRO [2] 2011. Such actions were already being effectively carried out in any case.[1] - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occupy_Wall_Street#Government_...
by somenameforme
6/19/2026 at 1:40:10 AM
Oh I’m well aware.It’s reprehensible and I am demanding accountability from my elected politicians. The only way we’ll see someone answer for these crimes, though, is if enough Americans give a shit to get off their fucking asses and actually put people into office who will bring change.
by solid_fuel
6/19/2026 at 2:51:00 PM
Pretty sure nobody is worried about peaceful protests.by aand16
6/18/2026 at 11:54:07 PM
I don't know that signing up for a rewards club and then complaining that you're being marketed to is quite the platonic ideal of rebellion you make it out to be.by treis
6/19/2026 at 6:39:46 AM
Doesn't the right to free association solve this? Don't patronize companies that do this.by gblargg
6/19/2026 at 11:59:04 AM
I'm a traveling healthcare worker, which means every 3 months is both a new contract for work and a new lease for a rental to stay at.So if I'm not willing to complete several hours of training modules uncompensated and before the start date of my contract, I'm within my rights to refuse. But this violation of most states' codes is common practice, and when I inform a new workplace that I'm not going to do it, they tell me it's "required," and the part they're careful not to put in writing is that my contract will be canceled if I make a fuss (there is almost always a clause in these contracts saying they can cancel any time for any reason).
So just move onto the next job, right? But the market is very feast-or-famine. It's just not smart to assert my rights during one of the famine periods.
Similarly, if I'm not willing to sign a lease for a rental saying my landlord is entitled to seize and sell all of my property for being even a minute late on rent, I've now considerably limited my housing options, which is not good when I have a new job that starts in two weeks. If that landlord then goes and tells all their landlord friends that I'm "difficult," I could be completely fucked.
Sure, it's "solved." It sucks anyway.
by engeljohnb
6/19/2026 at 10:40:50 AM
This, honestly is what i expected AI to challenge heads-on- because that is what its ideal for- little agents arguing for the consumer, the customer, the citizen. In the government offices, these constant advocates could undo all that damage faster then the companies can pile up anti-service moats.by 21asdffdsa12
6/19/2026 at 6:30:50 AM
Can you cite the especially in the US part? Maybe use Bolivia, Kosovo, and Indonesia as some random global comparisons.by drstewart
6/19/2026 at 11:47:38 AM
You're right, it would've been better to say "at least far as my experience in the US."by engeljohnb
6/19/2026 at 9:09:57 AM
[flagged]by CurryFurry