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Three foid moments in one day from LegalAdviceUK aka I want reveddit back :marseygiveup:

Family poisoned after using AI-generated mushroom identification book we bought from major online retailer.

Summary: His pet foid bought a book mushroom book off Amazon and they actually touched grass, picked up some poisonous mushrooms and landed themselves and their kids in hospital

Wife has fallen for serious scam, England

Summary: This guy's wife was approached by :marseytunaktunak: to register as the director of a company in exchange for £200 a year (lmao). The company is now in £100k of debt and is being dissolved. She's probably broken the law with this one.

Woman keeps looking into my flat with binoculars

Summary: lol wat

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My wife just received an email from the online retailer. She has been asked to "Not take any photographs or copies of the product in question due to copyright issues" and it states, "the product must be returned immediately by special delivery by [DATE]."

There's some other statements as well about our account being terminated if we fail to return the product by the specific date. We've got a lot of movies and series that we have purchased over the years on this account, I wouldn't want to lose them.

"My family nearly died, but I better do what Amazon says instead of suing them so I don't risk losing access to Despicable Me 3"

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There is probably a TOS clause saying that by opening the book he agreed to binding arbitration lol

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I'm sure Amazon have all kinds of weird small-print terms you 'agree' to when buying from them.

But, under UK law, it's pretty easy to get contract terms like that thrown out as 'unfair terms'. One of the few things the UK gets right is consoooomer protections.

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I dunno. We've got warning labels on everything because some idiot did something beyond stupid with a product, so the company got sued and here we are.

If you buy a crappy lawnmower repair book from a UK bookstore and totally wreck your lawnmower can you sue and win against the bookstore in the UK?

Call me crazy, but it seems like you'd only win against the publisher or owner of the crappy book.

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!fosstards look at how whipped the average DRM user is

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:!#marseyyikes:

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