The terms of service, also known as the document you're supposed to
read before signing up for a site or platform, is a treasure trove of
legal guidelines, rules and permissions that few people really care
about.
But there are a few things you're agreeing to, hidden within the
jargon, that might change the way you use the web. Some permissions,
like keeping personal information, protecting copyrights and preventing
impersonation, are well-known and relatively innocuous. That said,
there's a chance you're violating a term of service without even
realizing it.
Here are 10 things you didn't realize you agreed to in the social network terms of service you didn't read, but we did.
1. Facebook has permission to use your photos and videos for whatever it wants.
Have you ever wanted to see that awesome sunset picture you took or a funny video of your cats in a
Facebook
ad? No? Well, too bad, because when you sign up for Facebook, you give
it an expansive royalty-free license to use anything you post that could
be considered intellectual property.
You still own all of your content, but Facebook is allowed to use it
and give other people the right to use it, too. The only way to revoke
the license is by deleting the content from Facebook.
If it seems out of line, it's actually pretty commonplace among other social media sites.
Twitter,
Instagram and
Google all have similar clauses in their terms.
2. You can't use Facebook if you're a convicted sex offender.
This one is pretty straightforward. If you've been convicted of a sex crime, you aren't allowed to register for Facebook.
3. You're required to keep your contact information up to date.
Facebook requires all users to keep their profiles updated with any
changes to their contact information so it can make sure your account is
kept secure. While it doesn't specify a timetable for email addresses,
the terms say you need to update your cellphone number within 48 hours
of making the change.
4. How you explore Twitter, and how you got there
Twitter's
privacy policy
allows the company to track "your IP address, browser type, operating
system, the referring web page, pages visited, location, your mobile
carrier, device and application IDs, search terms, and cookie
information." Google does virtually the same thing.
5. You're not allowed to squat a username.
Are you planning to set up a Twitter account for your kid to use when
he's enough? That's not allowed, according to Twitter's terms of
service. Twitter typically deletes most accounts within six to nine
months of inactivity, so it's unlikely you'd be able to get away with it
anyway.
6. You're not allowed to post sexually suggestive content.
This one might seem like a no-brainer, but it's not just nudity
that's banned. The rule itself isn't very specific, but its sets a
presumably lower benchmark than similar rules from Facebook and Twitter
limiting offensive content.
7. You're not supposed to send ideas to Instagram, but if the company actually reads them and likes them, it'll use them.
Instagram's terms outline the company's policy "not to accept or
consider content, information, ideas, suggestions or other materials
other than those we have specifically requested." But, there's a caveat:
If, for some reason, your brilliant idea catches the eye of a
higher-up, then Instagram can use it and not give you a cent.
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