Quote: defpallyYes, that has to do with COPPA, but why can't a kid "use" the website as the language states? COPPA only applies to them creating an account and providing identifying information. See, I can nitpick the language too. According to the language a 12 year old cannot even search for Skylanders and look at them.
You're right - you are simply nit-picking the language. But, to your point, Best Buy probably doesn't care if a 12 year old "can't" browse, since they "can't" buy anything either.
Quote:Now as far as your business to person transaction - what about EBay?
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They are not using the 13 and under COPPA term, they use 18. In fact they are specifically making my point. You saying EBay's lawyers are wrong here?
Ohhh... getting close. Not quite there, but close. There are two major differences, though, between eBay and a private forum.
First off, an auction, even an online auction, is a very specific type of contract.
Second, eBay isn't a person-to-person transaction. You may think it is, but it isn't. Follow the money. eBay takes a cut. Therefore, it becomes a brokered transaction - which has various legal conditions placed on it that don't apply to something like, say, a message board.
Think of it this way - if someone posts a flyer onto a telephone pole for "free candy". Then, a kid gets abducted trying to get the "Free Candy"... do you sue the telephone company for the flyer posted on the pole?
Quote:Asking for evidence is fine. Asking someone to produce a legal precedence at the spur of the moment on an online fan forum, yes that bar is too high. I'm not arguing a case in front of a judge, I'm debating a point with a particularly hard-headed Internet person.
I never gave you a time table. Please, do feel free to take all the time you need to Google something that you seem to believe is a very obvious thing.
And for the record, you don't even have to provide links to court documents or anything of the like. For a case like this, there's bound to be a news story or two.
I'll give you a starting point - there's been a couple of times when someone has posted on Craig's List an ad that says something along the lines of "Hey, all the stuff in my house is free, come and take whatever you want."... except the address the person posting gave wasn't their own. After folks went in and robbed the house blind, the owners of the house found out what happened and did what...? Did they sue Craig's List and win? Because one would think there'd be something about that in a news story...
Quote: BahamutBreakerSo, I'll return to ignoring you, as long as you'll stop trolling my friends.
Does that ignoring me include taking pop shots at me in threads I've not even posted in on forums I rarely visit?
Quote:Since I don't have a lot of friends here[...]
Ya don't say? Hm.