Tuesday 20 July 2021

Public Places of the Internet v.07

If only there's a Public Place of the Internet that is not owned by companies, people could go there and hang out and do various activities together. Their terms and conditions should be universal as well. 

People who go there could have general expectations of what kind of customs should apply as well as what information would be exchanged in public places, and they would be right.

Currently the internet is a public place thank God, only its like a huge piece of land, it has no park, no public venues, no roads, no bridges, everything's private. Free market is great, however this free market is monopolistic with little alternatives. Yes yes, I'm not against free market its because of the anti-competitive practices and law, points arguable, but lets not go there (the considerations are heavy and would segway the topic). The reality is, there's little alternatives to google and facebook. Twitch and tik tok, crunchyroll maybe, but even so its still too few. 

Instead of private social medias, we should have open source social medias that have a universal terms and conditions and privacy policy, an open venue where people could open up different kinds of stalls of social applications there. 

To finance the venue the social medias could implement the golden sticker system

Tuesday 11 May 2021

NVIDIA's EULA and Privacy Policy is the oasis

NVIDIA's EULA and Privacy Policy linked from their GeForce Experience installer is just more than 1 page long, both of them. I take it as my dreams could come true. I could zoom out the page to 50% and everything fit.

Since the EULA doesn't appear in their website I can't link to the document from here. But the privacy policy (accessed in May, 2021) should be checked out, it is really compact compared to other big companies' privacy policies

Very Nice :)

Friday 16 April 2021

Me We's Privacy Bill of Rights v.02

So I was browsing Mr Eric Berg DC in youtube, and found out he was on this social media I never heard of.

Turned out it has Sir Tim Berners-Lee the world wide web inventor as its advisor, and it uses the Privacy Bill of Rights that I think is soooo great








Friday 9 April 2021

Your Phone Number

I think there's a benefit in governments took away people's phone number from the telecommunications providers. Just the number not the services, so that when we objected to certain practices, we could just change to their competitors without having to change number. 

Cause this is not 2001 when our number is just a relationship between the company and us, now it is tied to our banking, to other important applications that contains our public administrative identities. How could we change number now? and moreover in the future?

Cause there are clauses in most terms and conditions where they could change the terms and conditions, the contract, at their own whim and our continued usage of their services would be considered as acceptance and binding. If it were a business contract you would be scratching our hair vigorously and objected to it with passion. 

The digital terms and conditions might seem harmless some years ago, but overtime people are going to face problems, and one way or the other they are going to be "forced" to abuse some of the terms or clauses to their benefit, something unusual. Let's say in another 3 years they're going to want to do it again, and their business were going to be built upon the abuse... for example it used to be just a company storing your data in their own server, now they are sharing your data with third parties, and then next they couldn't conduct their businesses without it, the overtime there would come a need to require you to guarantee permission to your data for the next 2 years or 5 years... I mean something like that, since nobody's paying attention, and nobody's calling them out, it's only usual that they are going to build upon it and build upon it and build upon it.

Now I'm reading this telecommunication company's terms and conditions, and if it were other sites on the internet I would just object to the usual, lengthy, foreign, and hard to decipher, but now what's at stake is my number that I've been using for long and for most of my lifestyle needs... I couldn't just object... and what if they started some predatory practices? there's nothing I could do about it but to change my number... and then I had to start over again (I would be missing some data update with other applications that might still be tracking my interests based on the old number). 

This is not good, but what could I do about it?

Sunday 4 April 2021

Regulation Idea: Non Common Practices Label v.02

Sometimes products offer warrants, and people would expect that they might not include shipping costs. Restaurants might offer discounts, but not including drinks... another "expected" terms. 

But if a product had uncommon terms such as, "partially licensed not 100% sold", or requires users to have another product or to buy another accessories in order to fully function, or legal peculiarities such as phones imported from countries banned by the U.S, unregistered board / machines, or other uncommon, unexpected terms like that... the products should be labelled or marked with an "unusual practices" label. 

In order for such labels to work, countries or territories needed to define their currently common terms of trade and services. This also would make it easier for terms and conditions reader such as myself if this motivated companies to highlight discrepancies of their terms from the defined "standards". 

Friday 29 January 2021

Apple iCloud's "INDEMNIFICATION" paragraph v.02

There is this "INDEMNIFICATION" paragraph in iCloud Terms and Conditions that said two things I object:

1. "... you cannot sue Apple, its affiliates, ..., as a result of its decision to remove or refuse to process any information or Content, to warn you, to suspend or terminate your access to the Service, or to take any other action during the investigation of a suspected violation or as a result of Apple's conclusion that a violation of this Agreement has occured."

2. "... indemnify and hold harmless Apple from and against any and all claims and demands arising from usage of your Account, whether or not such usage is expressly authorized by you."

Mind that this is my opinion, I'm not a professional legal practitioner nor am I acting as one:

First of all, number 1 makes it volatile for business purposes, legally speaking. There's no guarantee that your transactions or important time of negotiation wouldn't be interrupted by Apple at its sole discretion. And then, if they were wrong, all of those losses would be deemed to have been indemnified, by you. 

Number 2 makes it so that if your account got cracked by the malice of Apple's personnel, due to the company's negligence or encouragement, you don't get to claim compensation from Apple

Those are just in a hindsight, from the top of my head... these 2 clauses are so problematic, the fact that they are there at the first place, I'm concerned that it is deeper than just those problems. 

Thursday 28 January 2021

Gojek ToC and PP v.02

I'm reading Gojek ToC and PP right now, and they are so good. I'm sorry that I haven't read it before the update time... really, and I know I'm supposed to write this after I read them all but up until now they are just conclusively so worth talking about it would make it more difficult for myself if I were not to write this now. 

Gojek ToC and PP:

https://www.gojek.com/en/terms-of-service/, as of the 30'th of July 2020
https://www.gojek.com/privacy-policy/, as of the 30'th of July 2020

Are legit, hands down... although I wish people could make these things much shorter and simpler and still hit the points but that's a worldwide problem. Gojek didn't escape that problem but their stuff is authentic, and just as good if not better in some paragraphs and wordings compared to popular, common ToC and PPs. 

Most ToCs and PPs utilize commonly used formats and sentences they looked similar with each other. That's for a good reason, we want some degree of standardization to make it easier to read/(skip). But those also would make legal documents more dangerous, in a way that they nudge readers to overlook some of the custom points unique to their services. Realistically, different sites/services should have their own unique exposures, as much similar their ToCs and PPs might look from another.

I'm all for not making everything different too much, please, it is hard enough to actually thoroughly read all of those legal documents, but if you made it like Gojek, that would be something else. 

Each problems addressed in the documents easily feels realistic, and there are a lot of points presented as such. By consistently being such straight-forward and informative throughout my reading, I got the sense that they have spent considerable resources to seriously take care of mine as much as theirs well-being, conditions, and interests. At the same time it feels like I'm living through the concerns addressed... and since there were lots of them it felt like studying a relevant skill or a relevant subject for an actual job. 

These are worth your time for their authenticity, the ToC and PP, each of them might be a slow read, not the easiest, but they don't give me that dismissible feeling as when I read other popular ToCs/PPs. 

------------------------------

no. 17 of the ToC contains a sentence that said:

"You shall not sue nor object the validity of this Terms of Use or the Privacy Policy which are made in the electronic form"

I think it should be changed to:

"You shall not sue nor object the validity of this Terms of Conditions and the Privacy Policy as electronic forms"