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Talk:EULA roofie: Difference between revisions

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Created page with "==More accessible title?== This looks like a slang term and it made no sense to me at first. What does "roofie" mean in the first place? Do they put people on the roof so they can kick them off and watch them suffer? Are they hiding the terms on the roof of the house such that you are normally not looking for them? What even is the etymology of the word? I would recommend changing it to something that is more accessible especially to people who speak English as a second..."
 
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I would recommend changing it to something that is more accessible especially to people who speak English as a second language. For example, "Hidden/Questionable EULA terms".
I would recommend changing it to something that is more accessible especially to people who speak English as a second language. For example, "Hidden/Questionable EULA terms".
==Should this be replaced with something more internationally applicable?=
"Using lengthy documents (often 50+ pages) to hide terms that rob you of your privacy and rights as an American citizen (your day in court)." 
I'm not sure since I don't know if this wiki is intended for consumer protection outside of America?

Revision as of 13:10, 15 January 2025

More accessible title?

This looks like a slang term and it made no sense to me at first. What does "roofie" mean in the first place? Do they put people on the roof so they can kick them off and watch them suffer? Are they hiding the terms on the roof of the house such that you are normally not looking for them? What even is the etymology of the word?

I would recommend changing it to something that is more accessible especially to people who speak English as a second language. For example, "Hidden/Questionable EULA terms".


=Should this be replaced with something more internationally applicable?

"Using lengthy documents (often 50+ pages) to hide terms that rob you of your privacy and rights as an American citizen (your day in court)." I'm not sure since I don't know if this wiki is intended for consumer protection outside of America?