308 points

Arbitration clauses must be made illegal

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64 points

Or at least reasonable.

It’s perfectly reasonable for, say, a tattoo artist not to be liable for the medical bills, if the ink causes a hitherto unknown allergy to kick in.

It’s not reasonable to argue that a streaming service agreement covers liability for being cut in half by a train.

There has to be a reasonable understanding of the underlying risks that are covered. Some things are just inherently risky, and if the buyer knows and understands that, she can agree on taking that risk. Otherwise, no doctor would ever touch any patient ever again.

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16 points

Otherwise, no doctor would ever touch any patient ever again.

Demonstrably false. In a public healthcare system it is also possible to have publicly funded patient injury compensation systems. Source: Live in Norway and we have both.

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2 points

That’s not the same. You still don’t have any legal claims against the hospital or the doctor. You can’t sue your surgeon, because you missed, say another week of work because of some unexpected bleeding.

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2 points

I would like to see whether and how a case of Negligence should work with the boilerplate arbitration clauses that they’re abusing.

Would Disney then roll over and sue the everliving out of the server as a scapegoat?

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2 points

Your tattoo example doesn’t make sense to me. The tattoo shop could require an agreement limiting liability without denying access to the courts.

Are you saying that it’s reasonable to be allowed to waive your right to access the legal system when getting a tattoo but not when accessing streaming services?

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2 points

no doctor would ever touch any patient ever again.

My country has heavy immunity for doctors. I think we can’t sue them, like it’s automatically a regional arbitration hearing, and at no point can one get “pain and suffering” but only “recoup of costs to fix as much as possible” kind of stuff.

So if the doc removes the wrong foot, he’ll lose his job, and you’ll get a pegleg or something like that.

Hmm. Just reading that makes me think the rate of vindictive doctor slayings is too low for that to be true.

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3 points

…and immunity is exactly what this is about.

Every time you get surgery, you sign a waiver basically saying “there’s an inherent risk to this, we’re not liable unless someone really screws up”. And that’s exactly what Disney is trying here - just using an absolutely bonkers interpretation of it.

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1 point

It’s perfectly reasonable for, say, a tattoo artist not to be liable for the medical bills, if the ink causes a hitherto unknown allergy to kick in.

Why would it be rasonable? Did the tatoo artist do what is (keyword:) reasonable on their end to ensure that doesn’t happen? Did they make information about tatoo ink allergies known to their customers? Do they advise their customers about the allergies? Do they use FDA approved tatoo inks?

It’s not reasonable to argue that a streaming service agreement covers liability for being cut in half by a train.

Did the streaming service clearly for example cause magnetic interference and was ruled as a large contributor to the disaster? If yes, then it’s reasonable.

Whatever scenatio you think of, there’s always room for liability. Some, nay, mlst of it’s far-fetched, but not impossible.

However there’s at least one thing that’s never reasonable, and that’s arbitration itself. Arbitration is someone making a decition which can’t be amended after it’s made. It can’t be appealed. New evidence coming to light after-the-fact means nothing. Arvbitration is absolute.

Arbitration doesn’t allow complaint. The judgement is final.

Which is fucking ridiculous.

Let’s return to your two claims of unreasonability:

It’s perfectly reasonable for, say, a tattoo artist not to be liable for the medical bills, if the ink causes a hitherto unknown allergy to kick in.

It’s not reasonable to argue that a streaming service agreement covers liability for being cut in half by a train.

There’s nothing stopping a normal court from fairly making a judgement. It can be appealed, which is fine.

What isn’t fine is giving a company, or a like-minded court sole and absolute jurisdictions over suits against a company by its users. And above that, making said judgements unappealable.

To paraphrase you: there has to be a reasonable understanding of the underlying facts of the case covered. Some claims are clearly ubsubstantiated. Some, however, are clearly substantiated and if the service provider knows and understands that, they would accept the jurisdiction of the court system without carveouts grossly in their favour.

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2 points

They are in the rest of the first world countries.

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0 points

You need to reform lawsuits at the same time. The US legal system allows lawyers to take cases on contingency, getting paid only if they win. In most other countries this isn’t allowed. In addition, in most other countries it’s much easier for the winner of the lawsuit to recover the legal costs of the lawsuit from the loser.

The result of this is that the US has a lot more nuisance and extremely speculative lawsuits. Under those conditions, a binding arbitration setup is more reasonable. It means that neither side is spending tons of money on lawyers. If you reform the legal system so that only people who stand a decent chance of winning are willing to sue, then definitely get rid of binding arbitration.

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189 points

Make sure to pirate all Disney media instead of consuming it legally so that you can sue them if they try to kill you.

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31 points

That’s what I don’t get about this. The point is either to get out of paying or at least make it very difficult. At the same time the cost to Disney as a company with all the bad press and fall out from doing this would be orders of magnitude greater than simply paying the widower compensation. Who signed off on it? The idea that a lawyer can do what ever it takes to win a case while simultaneously destroying the company they work for seems dumb as shit from a purely financial point of view.

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9 points
*
Deleted by creator
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13 points

Just pirate that shit

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14 points

Is there any good magnet urls to Disney’s whole collection?

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14 points

Google this hash info: EF4211584F37CA70A4B1A2E47E7E833C79ABACBA

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12 points

Jesus… You’re not wrong. That’s fucking crazy. You’re NOT wrong. Wtf is wrong with my country?

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5 points

Would that break the ToS if I had a trial previously?

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2 points

Yes and Disney will get very mad 😠😠

Think of the shareholders!!

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151 points
73 points

Disney allowed to kill your spouse because you watched the mandalorian

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8 points

Not the worse trade off. As long as we aren’t including Season 3.

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28 points

The dark arts of the mouse are a pathway to legal techniques some consider to be… unnatural.

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107 points

People don’t realize how important the outcome of this court case will be.

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40 points

Man, america is wild place. Do you have any laws there?

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45 points

Our laws protect what’s important to lawmakers, the giant corporations and billionaires.

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16 points

And laws that do protect the little guys get ignored by our right-wing courts. For instance, the courts quit enforcing the Sherman Antitrust Act because, in the words of Scalia, “it makes no economic sense.”

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13 points

Only the ones that are written for and protected by corporations. Everything else is the wild Wild West.

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10 points

Most Americans would be offended by your comment, and that’s why we don’t have nice things. We’re very, and I can not stress this enough, VERY stupid.

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9 points

It’s the law that the businesses get to screw you.

Oh yeah and every infant is assigned an assault weapon at birth.

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1 point

Oh yeah and every infant is assigned an assault weapon at birth.

Man, here voenkom has to find you and give you povestka to assign you assault rifle.

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25 points

It’s gonna be nuts.

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18 points

It’s certainly going to cause a reaction.

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9 points

It will likely be dismissed as Disney wasn’t the company responsible for staffing or managing the restaurant.

Which sucks, because I desperately want to see Disney take another massive L in the spotlight of the mainstream news cycle.

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90 points

Piracy is the safe option then. Got it.

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26 points

All it takes is one free trial. They got me, it’s over.

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20 points

Piracy, watching through a friend, BluRays & DVDs, hard copies & actually owning something as opposed to…perpetually renting access, owning nothing & being happy about it.

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