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Reason: None provided.

You can make contracts however you want. If they violate existing laws, you can still pursue legal action.

Ok, sue Twitter, I am fine with that. But why is this not already happening? Could it have anything to do with the fact that every Twitter user already agreed to allow Twitter to have complete executive control over all user submitted data?

I could say in a rental contract I'm allowed to burn anything you put in the apartment whenever I want, and it does not let me destroy important property.

I appreciate the analogy but don't find it particularly useful here. A more useful analogy would be to lease a music studio where the landlord claimed to own all the rights to any music you created while on their property. When you later try to launch your first album, the landlord points out that you can't because the music technically belongs to them now.

In fact this is how it works in universities. Invent the cure for cancer at med school? The university owns it because you created the work under their tutelage and with their equipment. Paint the next Mona Lisa in the studio at art school? Technically belongs to the school now.

It is all super "unfair" but the real problem is that everyone agrees to it, because they didn't do due diligence. If everyone balked, instead of going along blindly, we'd have an actual chance at making changes. Expecting gov to swoop in after the fact to magically fix the arrangement is not a real solution.

They cannot modify the information on there without assuming responsibility for everything everyone posts there and liability for it.

You didn't read the EULA. It explicitly states that Twitter can and will do exactly that, for any reason, at any time, in perpetuity, without compensation or notice, bla bla bla. And if you are a Twitter user, you agreed to those terms.

Edit: I may have misunderstood what you were saying in that last part. I do agree that they should be held liable. We can have both that, and walk away from abuse services.

179 days ago
1 score
Reason: Original

You can make contracts however you want. If they violate existing laws, you can still pursue legal action.

Ok, sue Twitter, I am fine with that. But why is this not already happening? Could it have anything to do with the fact that every Twitter user already agreed to allow Twitter to have complete executive control over all user submitted data?

I could say in a rental contract I'm allowed to burn anything you put in the apartment whenever I want, and it does not let me destroy important property.

I appreciate the analogy but don't find it particularly useful here. A more useful analogy would be to lease a music studio where the landlord claimed to own all the rights to any music you created while on their property. When you later try to launch your first album, the landlord points out that you can't because the music technically belongs to them now.

In fact this is how it works in universities. Invent the cure for cancer at med school? The university owns it because you created the work under their tutelage and with their equipment. Paint the next Mona Lisa in the studio at art school? Technically belongs to the school now.

It is all super "unfair" but the real problem is that everyone agrees to it, because they didn't do due diligence. If everyone balked, instead of going along blindly, we'd have an actual chance at making changes. Expecting gov to swoop in after the fact to magically fix the arrangement is not a real solution.

They cannot modify the information on there without assuming responsibility for everything everyone posts there and liability for it.

You did't read the EULA. It explicitly states that Twitter can and will do exactly that, for any reason, at any time, in perpetuity, without compensation or notice, bla bla bla. And if you are a Twitter user, you agreed to those terms.

179 days ago
1 score