- Andrew Solovay <asolovay_at_Z3YsuJtciAxQCkwAn-KE7C_qed7RZkrf2WCu8EFHPDVQ_-GUUQ5w-GvoTg0qJvHB9ukXRTkttnctUtLG_7w6zkQ.yahoo.invalid> wrote:
> ...which said that if the machine 1) didn't
> work, 2) didn't do what the expensive
> advertisements said, 3) electrocuted the
> immediate neighborhood, 4) and in fact
> failed entirely to be inside the expensive
> box when you opened it, this was expressly,
> absolutely, implicitly and in no event the fault
> or responsibility of the manufacturer, that the
> purchaser should consider himself lucky to be
> allowed to give his money to the manufacturer,
etc.
I have long been searching for that elusive agreement
that is both entirely illusory as to what my side
promises, horribly binding as to what the other side
promises, and nonetheless legall enforcable.
The above is not a bad beginning. Also, whenever you
go to any electronics store, flip the order form over
and actually read the back (you will need a magnifying
glass). The above is pretty much what it means.
Chris Lemens
(Not an ad: If you have a little extra money to donate to a good cause, check out http://www.modestneeds.org/.)
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