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A Promise Falls in the Forest
Mark Rasch, 2004-07-26

A federal court recently ruled that website privacy policies aren't binding, because nobody reads them. The implications are far reaching for contract law and the Internet.

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A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-07-26
Anonymous- Your Not Data-mining Me! (1 replies)
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-07-28
Anonymous Amateur
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-07-26
Anonymous (1 replies)
did not belong to the customer, because the customer "voluntarily provided some information that was included" in the information given to the government, and that when Northwest "compiled and combined" this information with other data it "became Northwest's property."

So, would this be invalid if you were not only fill out the required boxes in the web form? Is Northwest actually keeping the data seperate from those who fill out non-required boxes? Sounds like a bunch of crap to me.

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Link to this comment: http://www.securityfocus.com/comments/columns/257/27689#27689
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-07-28
Anonymous
Time for an appeal ! 2004-07-27
Daniel Convissor
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-07-27
Anonymous
Rogue state 2004-07-28
Louis Bertrand
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-07-28
Anonymous
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-07-29
L. Kelly
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-07-29
Anonymous
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-07-29
Anonymous
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-07-29
Anonymous
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-07-30
Anonymous
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-07-30
Anonymous
Will not apply to EULA 2004-07-31
-bildr
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-08-02
Steerpike
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-08-02
Anonymous







 

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