(no title)
ar0
|
2 years ago
I do not read this court decision like that at all: the point of contention there seems to be that the customer was just sent a link to a webpage (where the contractual terms can be changed from under him at will by the company, thus this not being durable). The court makes it pretty clear in my (non-lawyer) opinion that attaching a PDF to the email would have been fine.
actionfromafar|2 years ago
Ramble Edit: it's unfortunate IMHO that there is no "read only" medium anymore. Not sure what it would look like now when USB-C is taking over the world, and that ship probably sailed, but it would be really cool and useful to have the option of a "data only" USB.
Maybe computers could have one USB port marked as "ROM". Or a switch or LED symbol indicating "ROM safe" mode.
When using such a ROM port, anything USB inserted there would only look like a DVD reader. A USB drive would get its files "mirrored" into a virtual ISO filesystem. Any other devices, such as keyboards etc would be just ignored and not connected to at all.
dfox|2 years ago
Then there are LTO tapes that have WORM version, which is notionally not overwritable, but that is IIRC also only enforced by software (of the drive).
jimktrains2|2 years ago
Also, this is only a software solution as the USB protocol would require bidirectional transmission.
Repulsion9513|2 years ago
Even the (*-grand)parent never said the law actually says it can't be an email attachment, they said companies seem to interpret it that way. Which would not be surprising in the least. Then someone said they've never heard of any such law, and I pointed out that it exists.
I'm not sure who you're arguing with but it isn't me or in fact any of the people in this thread.