Terms of Service and Felony
It's the broadness of the initial procedure and decision in the Drew case that has people worried. Legal experts paying attention to the issue are showing concern over the Drew verdict, and some question
how safe the Internet might be for people who, before the MySpace incident, were breaking very minor contracts.
The overall problem is that many terms of service violations seem pretty ordinary, and it's likely that people commit them every day without even being aware of it. And if people did go through the effort of reading a Web site's terms of service, it would take a lot of time and effort. For one, it's estimated that if everyone sat down and read the terms of service for every Web site they accessed, as much as $365 billion would be lost in productivity [source: Anderson]. And while some terms of service are straightforward -- Google users, for instance, essentially agree to not blame the company for any "offensive, indecent or objectionable" content they might come across during search -- many others are full of difficult-to-understand legal jargon.
And there have been misunderstandings in the past that close readers have pointed out. Google, for instance, had to change a section in its terms of service for its new Web browser, Chrome, when some users pointed out a particular aspect in Section 11 of the document. The language stated that Google owned any content you "submitted, posted or displayed" while using the browser. This indicated that any blog posts you made or e-mails you sent, according to the terms of service, belonged to Google. The developers who created the beta version of Chrome, however, had simply copied and pasted the information from its Universal Terms of Service agreement, which requires users to give Google a "license" to user-generated content because of copyright law. Google changed the specific Chrome document and apologized for the incident on its blog [source: Yang].
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When people use the Internet in a typical manner -- reading and sending e-mails, checking the news, watching some videos -- they don't put too much thought into the act.
But did you ever think using the Internet could turn you into a felon?
Decisions handed down in the infamous Lori Drew case have led some people to worry about what it now means to violate a Web site's Terms of Service.
The big story that has many users asking this question involves the social networking Web site MySpace. Although the site has developed a bad reputation for being an easy place for stalkers and predators to create profiles and easily communicate with other members, one event in 2006 caused a storm of outrage across the Internet. When Lori Drew, a 49-year-old parent from Missouri, grew concerned after a 13-year-old girl from her neighborhood, Megan Meier, stopped being friends with Drew's daughter, she used unconventional methods to address the situation. Drew, her daughter and an 18-year-old employee of Drew's created a fake profile on MySpace under the name "Josh Evans." With the phony personality, the three befriended Megan over the Web site, only to bully her with insulting messages. Distraught by the attacks, Megan committed suicide by hanging herself in her closet. The Drew family had been aware that Megan was taking medication for depression.
Because the MySpace servers are located in Los Angeles, a California attorney, Thomas O'Brian, stepped in to charge Drew with violating criminal law. O'Brian argued that by using a phony profile, Drew was violating MySpace's Terms of Service, which state that people must offer "truthful and accurate" information about themselves. Within this violation, Drew was also in violation of "unauthorized access" to MySpace's services, which breaks federal law laid out in the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act.
Being guilty of this kind of "unauthorized access" is simply a misdemeanor. But if the act is "in furtherance" of another kind of illegal act, the charge could suddenly turn into a felony. Drew escaped conviction of a felony, but in November 2008, she was convicted on three misdemeanor counts of computer hacking [source: Zetter]. So what does this mean for the everyday user?
http://computer.howstuffworks.com/we...of-service.htm
How long do you think it will take Aeria to start acting on all the breaches of their ToS now?