OK, I'll follow your lead, sue Zuck tomorrow.
Thing one that happens next: you are presented with the user agreement that you agreed to when you signed up for the service.
The same user agreement that clearly states that they can abuse you six ways to Sunday, without reason, without explanation, for all of perpetuity.
"Oh but I didn't read the contract before I signed it" and other lame arguments, are not going to go very far.
I feel your pain, in that you were duped into believing the service was something it is not. But now that it is very clear what the service actually is, and after you actually read the terms you agreed to, what is your disposition now?
If your reaction is anything other than deleting your account immediately, and blocking their domains at your firewall and or browser level filtering, you're doing it wrong.
IT pros have been warning you about this very issue for years. That it took the service to figuratively shish kabob you from both ends before you saw the truth, is more your problem than Facebook's.
OK, I'll follow your lead, sue Zuck tomorrow.
Thing one that happens next: you are presented with the user agreement that you agreed to when you signed up for the service.
The same user agreement that clearly states that they can abuse you six ways to Sunday, without reason, without explanation, for all of perpetuity.
"Oh but I didn't read the contract before I signed it" and other lame arguments, are not going to go very far.
I feel your pain, in that you were duped into believing the service was something it is not. But now that it is very clear what the service actually is, and after you actually read the terms you agreed to, what is your disposition now?
If your reaction is anything other than deleting your account immediately, and blocking their domains at your firewall and or browser level filtering, you're doing it wrong.
IT pros have been warning you about this very issue for years. That it took the service to figuratively shish kabob from both ends before you saw the truth, is more your problem than Facebook's.
OK, I'll follow your lead, sue Zuck tomorrow.
Thing one that happens next: you are presented with the user agreement that you agreed to when you signed up for the service.
The same user agreement that clearly states that they can abuse you six ways to Sunday, without reason, without explanation, for all of perpetuity.
"Oh but I didn't read the contract before I signed it" and other lame arguments are not going to go very far.
I feel your pain, in that you were duped into believing the service was something it is not. But now that it is very clear what the services actually is, and after you actually read the terms you agreed to, what is your disposition now?
If your reaction is anything other than deleting your account immediately, and blocking their domains at your firewall and or browser level filtering, you're doing it wrong.
IT pros have been warning you about this very issue for years. That it took the service to figuratively shish kabob from both ends before you saw the truth, is more your problem than Facebooks.