• pulsewidth@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    Very resonable (imo) response from Gargron (lead developer of Mastodon):

    I’ve forwarded your question to our legal help and will provide an answer as soon as they give it to me. What you must understand is that our lawyers don’t have experience with federated platforms, and we don’t have experience with law, so we meet somewhere in the middle. Meta presumably has an in-house legal team that can really embed themselves in the problem area; our lawyers are external and pro-bono and rely on us to correctly explain the requirements and community feedback. The draft has been around for something like a year and none of the community members pointed out this issue until now. I’ll add one thing:

    “My assumption, {… shortened for brevity …} is that when you post content it gets mirrored elsewhere, and this continues until a deletion notice is federated. So I’d assume if an instance somewhere mirrors my content they can’t get in trouble for it, and I’d also assume that if there is a deletion or maybe a block and a reasonable interpretation of the protocol would say that the content should be removed, I could send them a takedown and at that point they’d have to honor it.”

    The goal of the terms is to make assumptions like this explicit, because assumptions are risky both sides. Just because luckily there were no frivolous lawsuits around this so far doesn’t mean there isn’t a risk of one.

    Cory has had a much more calm response on a fediverse post, offering to reach out to the EFF’s lawyers for assistance in drafting a better ToS for Mastodon, and other experienced lawyers have offered help also. Amongst the usual negativity from some users.

    I’ll be keeping my eye on the outcome but so far it looks positive.

    • andypiper@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      Mastodon comms person here. We’re discussing how we go forward. The questions being asked are all absolutely reasonable, and we want to do what we can to improve the terms (that we do need to have in place) taking into account the feedback and offers of support.

      • Optional@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        What, EFF doesn’t know any German lawyers? I’d imagine they know a few. They have been around for three and a half decades.

      • neclimdul@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        With the local law, probably not. With the translating the concerns of open communities like the fediverse and FLOSS into legal terms, most definitely.

        • ViatorOmnium@piefed.social
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          6 days ago

          The same legal terms might mean vastly different things in Germany and the US. This is often the case in arbitration and warranty clauses.

          • AstralPath@lemmy.ca
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            6 days ago

            That doesn’t negate the value of having them participate in the conversation though.

      • andypiper@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        Perhaps not, perhaps so, but we do have other folks offering support and we will do what we can to get to a better situation here.

  • oong3Eepa1ae1tahJozoosuu@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    Update: it seems, they’re taking the feedback seriously.

    [email protected] - We’ve heard your feedback on the Terms of Service updates for mastodon.social and mastodon.online,  and we’re pausing the implementation date (previously announced to users via email as 1st July 2025) so we can take further advice and make improvements.

    It may take us a moment to consult with the right people, so please bear with us while we do so. As always, we appreciate your patience and support.

    https://mastodon.social/@Mastodon/114709820512537821

  • Allero@lemmy.today
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    6 days ago

    I kinda see that they want to cover their asses a bit, but arbitration waivers as a whole should never be legal to begin with.

    One should always be able to exercise their legal rights.

  • ikt@aussie.zone
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    6 days ago

    how badly can you be abused by a twitter clone service you voluntarily agree to sign up to ?

    • Ephera@lemmy.ml
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      6 days ago

      Yeah, I don’t like when corporations put stuff like that into their ToS, but at the same time, I 100% understand why every open-source license under the sun has it. You’re giving it away for free, so you don’t want people to sue for more than you’re providing for free.

      Mastodon.social is currently very much in the latter camp of giving things away for free. I also understand that a service is yet another beast than a piece of software, since they hold your personal data and may leak/sell it. But yeah, at this point in time, I wouldn’t want someone to be able to sue Mastodon.social out of existence. I guess, it depends a lot on how it’s formulated in the end…

  • Zoldyck@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    Important to note that this is about the mastodon.social instance, not about all of Mastodon

  • Not_mikey@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    6 days ago

    Could someone explain why binding arbitration clauses are horrible? My understanding is that it keeps costs low on both sides as taking things to actual court can get expensive.

    • HailSeitan@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      First, they make the proceedings private: there’s no public record of the proceedings or verdict, and even if you win there’s no precedent that others can use. The for-profit nature of the arbitrator (much or even most of whose business comes from corporate clients) represents a conflict of interest.

      Second, they isolate the plaintiff: you can’t sue as part of a class action, so no lawyer can represent a group of similarly wronged people in exchange for a percentage of any verdict. This means you have to pay for your own lawyer, which many people can’t afford to do and even if you can it may not be worth it if the damage is small enough.

      Together, these issues massively favor business and employers that include these clauses in contracts, as reflected in both win rates for corporations as well the number of cases brought against them versus in open court.

    • Scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech
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      6 days ago

      But they can stack the deck heavily in their favor, and you don’t have the same legal protections anymore. Who arbitrates Where? When?

  • albert180@piefed.social
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    6 days ago

    This binding arbitration bullshit is unenforceable in Germany anyways for end users

    I’m wondering if they used ChatGPT to crank this bullshit out

  • Hello_there@fedia.io
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    6 days ago

    Is it even possible to prove deletion of content if it has been distributed to hundreds of decentralized servers?

    • SorteKanin@feddit.dk
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      6 days ago

      No. In fact, ActivityPub has no general mechanism for even knowing where content has been distributed to. So when you ask your instance to delete something, it can’t actually know what other instances to ask to delete the mirrored content.

      Mastodon tries its best by sending deletion requests to all known instances, in the hope that that will reach all instances that have fetched the content. But in fact, instances that are unknown to your own instance could have the content as well, though this is probably a very rare occurrence.

      Bottom line: Don’t write anything on the internet that you don’t want publicly displayed. Anyone can save it and then you can’t force them to delete it. That applies to the entire internet. It also applies to the fediverse.