7704A
Well-known member
Heads up, the terms of service for the Fryette support forum requires you to give up legal rights to take them to court either as an individual or as a group in a class action if they do something illegal that, say, violates consumer rights or worse:
https://support.fryette.com/tos#heading--disputes
(same link, but archived for longevity) :
https://web.archive.org/web/20240824190142/https://support.fryette.com/tos#heading--disputes
Screenshot:
From the wording of the bolded paragraph (their emphasis, not mine) it looks like this possibly applies to all disputes with Fryette, and not just disputes related to the terms of service for the forum or your use of the forum.
Now I am no expert on this stuff, but here is what I've found so far briefly looking online for reports 'n articles about this practice:
https://support.fryette.com/tos#heading--disputes
(same link, but archived for longevity) :
https://web.archive.org/web/20240824190142/https://support.fryette.com/tos#heading--disputes
Screenshot:
From the wording of the bolded paragraph (their emphasis, not mine) it looks like this possibly applies to all disputes with Fryette, and not just disputes related to the terms of service for the forum or your use of the forum.
Now I am no expert on this stuff, but here is what I've found so far briefly looking online for reports 'n articles about this practice:
- Arbitrators are not bound to rule according to the law. As recently as '94 if I recall the date correctly, a survey showed that around 20% of AAA construction arbitrators didn't, sometimes because they didn't know the applicable law. Now the Fryette terms do state that California law shall govern disputes, which may qualify as satisfying the AAA provision for parties to agree on the law the arbitrator will judge by, however I don't know how that interacts with the above statistic about the 20% of arbitrators in a specific field. https://rmfpc.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/FLJ-Must-Arbitrators-Follow-the-Law.pdf
- You can't organize with other wronged parties to bring a class action suit (see screenshot).
- Arbitration can end up being more expensive than court https://btlg.us/arbitration-not-necessarily-a-better-option-than-litigation/
- Arbitration can lack discovery: https://btlg.us/arbitration-not-necessarily-a-better-option-than-litigation/
- If an arbitration decision is clearly wrong, unfair, etc., there is no right to an appeal outside of a narrow set of requirements. https://www.adr.org/sites/default/files/document_repository/AAA229-After_Award_Issued.pdf, https://www.jamsadr.com/files/uploa...ppeal-arbitration-award_law360_2015-01-28.pdf
- Consumer rights organizations seem to hate it: https://www.nclc.org/study-99-of-consumers-unaware-they-are-subject-to-forced-arbitration/
- Arbitration sessions seem to be more closed off and confidential than court cases: https://www.americanprogress.org/article/the-case-against-mandatory-consumer-arbitration-clauses/
- "Victims" seem to win more in court than in arbitration: https://www.americanprogress.org/article/the-case-against-mandatory-consumer-arbitration-clauses/
Last edited: