It's such an insane way of thinking about T&Cs though because it
assumes people actually read them. Nobody does. At least nobody that I
know.
I once told a legal team from a bank that calling the legal info
"important information" was terrible because it isn't important to
anyone except other lawyers. Certainly not someone using the website.
They agreed to "legal information" on the button instead, which of
course meant nobody read it but they were covered.
Sigh.
p.s. To answer your question, sort of, Apple's installers do something
similar. They show a screen of legal cack, then when you just hit
continue it pops up an "Accept" "Don't Accept" alert that you have to
click on one of to continue.
Best,
Andy
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Andy Polaine
Research | Writing | Strategy
Interaction Concept Design
Education Futures
Twitter: apolaine
Skype: apolaine
http://playpen.polaine.com
http://www.designersreviewofbooks.com
http://www.omnium.net.au
http://www.antirom.com
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