• it_depends_man@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    This is not the answer to your question, but a comment. Sorry, I am aware that it may not be helpful to you.


    I don’t think TOS are very hard to read once you’ve read one or two, if you care, you should just read the TOS.

    For example, if you’re concerned about EU-US datatransfer, the privacy policy has to outline who data is shared with, so you can skim it and see if they mention sharing data at all, or if they are doing it with specific companies, or just “partners”.

    On the internet and social media, you have to transfer the rights to your content to the social media content, because it’s the only way they’re allowed to store, replicate and distribute your comments or post.

    That kind of stuff. And those paragraphs mostly look the same.

    • Lytia @lemmy.today
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      5 days ago

      My previous statement is outdated (see replies). I still think TLDRs are inherently wrong, but ToS;DR seems to have improved significantly.

      The website is extremely opinionated IMO, which just goes to show how important it is to read the ToS and not a TLDR.

        • Lytia @lemmy.today
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          5 days ago

          After trying to find some examples, I’ve determined that my previous statement is incorrect. It seems the site has expanded by a considerable amount, and the complaints I had (e.g. Tor was ranked something like C while Google was ranked B) no longer apply.

          Regardless, I think having someone else summarize a legally binding contract is still a horrible idea in so many ways.

  • upstroke4448@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    6 days ago

    While these tools are nice to get a jist of things they are prone to mistakes and misinterpration. You should not be relying on them if your threat model requires you actually know what data your giving away instead of just being curious.