Visiting Equifax's site to see if you're a victim of the recent data breach can require you to waive lawsuit rights:
By all accounts, the Equifax data breach is, as we reported Thursday, "very possibly the worst leak of personal info ever." The incident affects possibly as many as 143 million people.
But if you want to find out if your data might have been exposed, you waive your right to sue the Atlanta-based company. We're not making this up. The company has now published a website allowing consumers to input their last six digits of their Social Security numbers to find out.
Like most websites, at the bottom of this new site is a section called "Terms of Use." There, in paragraph 4, is bolded, uppercase text of note. It tells site visitors that you agree to waive your right to sue and instead must "resolve all disputes by binding, individual arbitration."
AGREEMENT TO RESOLVE ALL DISPUTES BY BINDING INDIVIDUAL ARBITRATION. PLEASE READ THIS ENTIRE SECTION CAREFULLY BECAUSE IT AFFECTS YOUR LEGAL RIGHTS BY REQUIRING ARBITRATION OF DISPUTES (EXCEPT AS SET FORTH BELOW) AND A WAIVER OF THE ABILITY TO BRING OR PARTICIPATE IN A CLASS ACTION, CLASS ARBITRATION, OR OTHER REPRESENTATIVE ACTION. ARBITRATION PROVIDES A QUICK AND COST EFFECTIVE MECHANISM FOR RESOLVING DISPUTES, BUT YOU SHOULD BE AWARE THAT IT ALSO LIMITS YOUR RIGHTS TO DISCOVERY AND APPEAL.
(Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday September 09 2017, @06:57PM (2 children)
Somehow I doubt that part of the "agreement" is enforceable. This is a piece of information they are obligated to provide, I believe, and if so, attaching strings to provide the info seems strange. They like to put all sort of things into these agreements and they fully know that some (or many) of them would not stand up in court. It's not an accident that they always include "some parts of this agreement may not be legal in your jurisdiction, but that does not affect the rest" (or something similar).
(Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Saturday September 09 2017, @08:02PM (1 child)
Legal advice from AC on the internet. You get what you pay for.
🌻🌻 [google.com]
(Score: 1, Touché) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday September 09 2017, @08:21PM
Free opinion from some named asshole on the internet who feels his giant ego is important enough to register an account.