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rsync 7 hours ago

"In most cases you can’t use the device without agreeing to the terms of service right?"

Yeah ?

Who agreed to that ToS ? Abby McAbbott ? With no phone number ? A throwaway email address ?

As I said: I have not entered into any agreements of any kind with Abbott. You should not either.

Aurornis 7 hours ago | parent | next [-]

> Who agreed to that ToS ? Abby McAbbott ? With no phone number ? A throwaway email address ?

I don’t think this matters in the way you think it does. If they can demonstrate that you have to click through the ToS to use the device and app, then the burden would be on you to show that you did not accept the ToS to use the device. But therein lies the catch: If you found a way to circumvent their setup process, you wouldn’t be using the device as designed or intended.

rsync 7 hours ago | parent | next [-]

"If they can demonstrate that you have to click through the ToS to use the device and app ..."

There's nothing to demonstrate. We will have no interactions.

The op implied (probably correctly) that their ToS is toxic. I am pointing out that there is no reason for you to enter into that ToS.

Are you suggesting that I, an anonymous piggyback user of their service, would blow up my anonymity (and all of the protections and peace of mind that it affords) by attempting to reestablish some form of legal contact ?

No. It's easy come, easy go and that's just fine with me.

Aurornis 7 hours ago | parent [-]

> There's nothing to demonstrate. We will have no interactions.

Ok? Then it doesn’t matter if you accept or not.

The ToS doesn’t come into play unless there’s legal action. If you’re never going to enter into legal action with the company then it doesn’t matter if you accept the ToS or not.

rsync 6 hours ago | parent [-]

I think we agree with one another.

I'm simply trying to reiterate - as often as possible: you do not need to tie your personal identity to products and services like this.

Merry Christmas!

Supermancho 7 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

> If you found a way to circumvent their setup process, you wouldn’t be using the device as designed or intended.

Liability in civil court is not as simple as you posit. Severability and judge discretion are but 2 ways that immediately can invalidate this line of argument. The cause of actual damages are almost always scrutinized, meaning the company would have to prove that the legal agreement could somehow have prevented the damage. Courtrooms are often mischaracterized as following robotic rules and precedence to ill-effect, as if there aren't people in the courtroom using good judgement. This is largely because those cases are the ones most publicized, not because it's the norm.

Aurornis 7 hours ago | parent [-]

That’s orthogonal to the comment I’m responding to. The parent commenter was claiming that because they left a device in airplane mode when they accepted the ToS, it doesn’t count. Like it’s a loophole that allows one to accept it but not have it count.

The actual terms of the ToS will always be evaluated in court. You can’t, however, go into court and argue that the ToS doesn’t apply because you put a fake name into the app and left it in airplane mode.

You also wouldn’t get anywhere if you bought their device but used it with your own reverse engineered app or something, as the app is considered part of the product.

Supermancho 5 hours ago | parent [-]

Fair enough. I apologize for my misunderstanding.

hcknwscommenter 7 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Doesn't really work that way. If you want to sue Abbot, then you have to reveal yourself. At which point, it will be clear that you were in fact using the product and did in fact agree to the ToS. If you never sue Abbot, then sure. But then it doesn't matter.

wombatpm 6 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Part of the benefit of CGM’s is you can automatically load your readings to your doctor. I have a T1 child, so when I call with a problem I can get quick answers.

Related, Abbot previously had problems with their freestyle lite test strips. There were lawsuits, fines and most insurance dropped them from their covered diabetic suppliers.