How much of your information the likes of Facebook and Google store about you

1989

Well-Known Member
and what kind of american does that make you?

this is fundamentally whats wrong with america: no morals and only thinking about profits. and what you know - the country has gone to :censored2:s with this mentality.
One that should look out for the feds.
 

1989

Well-Known Member
no one should own facebook stocks. the company should be paying its users for all the data its raking up.
If they started paying, I might sign up. But if they did, everyone would sign up. Facebook would win in the end.
 

Brownslave688

You want a toe? I can get you a toe.
and what kind of american does that make you?

this is fundamentally whats wrong with america: no morals and only thinking about profits. and what you know - the country has gone to :censored2:s with this mentality.
Something like 2.5 billion people have no with the Facebook user agreement and I'm supposed to feel bad for buying a few hundred shares?
 

rickyb

Well-Known Member
And????? That’s why everyone has to check a box that they agree to the terms of the website when they sign up.

Wait a minute, is the browncafe paying you?
read this book:

The%20Fine%20Print300.jpg
 

1989

Well-Known Member
the people who arent protesting are the sheep
Get together, buy their stock, control the company you want to change. You can control the board.

That’s the same thing you will have to do to control these large co ops you like. Get on their board.
 

rickyb

Well-Known Member
And????? That’s why everyone has to check a box that they agree to the terms of the website when they sign up.

Wait a minute, is the browncafe paying you?
Why in the hell would they get paid to use a service they want?


Guess gmc should pay me to drive their vehicles. Smh
Nader writes: "We need to focus on the incarcerating infrastructure that corporate attorneys build year after year to insulate their corporate paymasters from structural accountability under the rule of law.

Take the two main pillars of American law—contracts and torts. For half a century, power lawyers, backed by corporate campaign cash for legislators, have hacked at the roots of the legal protections for shoppers and for wrongfully injured people. Fine print contracts—called “mice print” by Senator Elizabeth Warren—block consumers from going to court and mandate compulsory arbitration. Other fine print lets the vendors change the contract any time without getting specific consent of the buyers. Internet fine print amounts to simply “clicking” and being instantly bound by a matrix of contract peonage. This victory for corporate lawyers is a defeat for the American people who lose their freedom of contract—a servitude that should arouse conservatives and liberals alike."
 
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