• @[email protected]
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    -11 year ago

    Context matters and I’d call this a straw man argument.

    What context would the court need to give them enough information to pass a judgment?

    Context 1) Spouse at the grocery store: “I was at the grocery store, felt horny, and texted my wife some emojis that implied some sexy time later. She replied with a thumbs up!”

    Context 2) Spouse who received the text: “My husband, who was at the grocery store, texted me food emojis, which I thought was a grocery list, so I gave them a thumbs up to approve the list!”.

    In the specific case given by the OP, the person who sent the thumbs up said that they did so to acknowledge the receipt of the contract, not that they approved the contract. That would be enough context for me to understand that they did not intend to use the thumbs up to “sign” the contract.

    It should have been up to the court to recognized that unless both parties understand the method of agreement for this given contract, that it could not have possibly been binding.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      The article further states that the defendent had agreed to many previous contracts in such a manner.

    • @[email protected]
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      -11 year ago

      No one has a fucking contract for consensual sex you incel. Plus you obviously have never participated in any kind of contract or business relationship. You typically do not need to have a signed, witnesses and notarized contract for “routine” business relationships and it’s obvious in this case that they had an existing relationship that the farmer was trying to back-out of because he figured out he could make more money elsewhere.

      For your final point It should have been up to the court to recognized that unless both parties understand the method of agreement for this given contract, that it could not have possibly been binding. It was, and based on the prexisting business relationship and prior contracts agreed to via text, it was OBVIOUS that the “thumbs up” was intended to confirm the informal agreement.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        Calm down, buddy.

        Consensual sex requires a clear YES, or else it’s a NO. Is a thumbs up a yes? Even if the “yes” was for something totally out of context? Do you see why relying on an Emoji is simply too vague to be serious?

        Plus you obviously have never participated in any kind of contract or business relationship.

        Hundreds of professional transactions worth millions of dollars. Large orders REQUIRE a company issued purchase order with specific dates for delivery, billing and shipping addresses clearly listed, a refernce to a quote (if one was given), and a contact person. It does not need to be signed, but most are, depending on where it’s coming from.

        I’ve never heard of a professional business using Emojis to conduct business or to sign off on large contracts.

        it’s obvious in this case that they had an existing relationship that the farmer

        Yes, this is something i clearly missed/misread, so my understanding of this case is notably inaccurate. Totally my bad. 🤦‍♂️

        • Hypnoctopus
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          21 year ago

          The article says that according to the guy who sued him, he had accepted the terms of a contract through text message.

          However, it doesn’t say that according to the guy that sued him, he had accepted a contract specifically through the sending of 👍 in a text message in the past.

      • Hypnoctopus
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        11 year ago

        The article did not say that he had ever used 👍 previously in text to accept a contract. It says that according to the guy who sued him, he had responded through text message in the past to accept a contract.