The question is at which point should the company be responsible for putting this important information elsewhere besides in small print in the legal babble that is the T&C.Originally posted by: spidey07
Fault of the consumer to not read the Terms and Conditions. From the article it is CLEARLY defined.
Originally posted by: blurredvision
The question is at which point should the company be responsible for putting this important information elsewhere besides in small print in the legal babble that is the T&C.Originally posted by: spidey07
Fault of the consumer to not read the Terms and Conditions. From the article it is CLEARLY defined.
That argument doesn't always hold up in court, actually many companies are losing thoes battles because the terms and conditions they set are ridiculous compared to the services they claim to be offering.Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: blurredvision
The question is at which point should the company be responsible for putting this important information elsewhere besides in small print in the legal babble that is the T&C.Originally posted by: spidey07
Fault of the consumer to not read the Terms and Conditions. From the article it is CLEARLY defined.
The company is responsible for offering a service. The consumer is responsible if they are willing to accept the terms. Nothing more and nothing less.
Always read the Ts and Cs. But in no way is a company responsible for stupidity.
