I know this is a bit outside the realm of domaining law, but I figured one of you internet hipster lawyers might know.
Does this clause seen in most T&C, User/Affiliate Agreements, Privacy Policy, and other miscellaneous online legal agreements hold up in court where the argument hinges on changes from the original agreement?
Does it hold up regardless of the company being able to prove they gave sufficient notification of changed terms and conditions?
I was just reading through a T&C agreement, that's what spurred me to ask here.
We ("the company") may modify the terms of this agreement at any time at our sole discretion. Your continued usage of <whatever> indicates your acceptance of the new agreement.
Does this clause seen in most T&C, User/Affiliate Agreements, Privacy Policy, and other miscellaneous online legal agreements hold up in court where the argument hinges on changes from the original agreement?
Does it hold up regardless of the company being able to prove they gave sufficient notification of changed terms and conditions?
I was just reading through a T&C agreement, that's what spurred me to ask here.