Everyone has a definition of sensible.

My definition:

When making a high-priced purchase, make your you understand everything
about the situation.  Read all the fine print (I mean, it was there, and
it was there linked from the front page and NOT in fine print).  Ask
questions. Probe.

Do you buy a car without asking as many questions about the contract
and warranty as possible?  Without asking for definitions?  If you
don't, well, then it is your problem.

totoro;169778 Wrote: 
> Give us all a break. We've walked through what a sensible reading of "No
> risk trial" means. The only sensible meaning is "no financial risk".
> Yes, it is _possible_ to read it some other way, but, in reality, any
> other meaning relies on some _other_ risk that nobody here has
> defined.
> 
> I can't imagine anyone seriously arguing otherwise on this point. If
> you have fine print which contradicts the only sensible reading of your
> huge banner text, you are being dishonest and sleazy. End of story,
> really. 
> 
> And again: maybe it's legal, but who cares?
> 
> I'll put it very bluntly-- calling someone who acts in a sleazy manner
> sleazy is not "bad-mouthing" them: it's merely telling the truth.
> Sometimes the truth hurts.


-- 
lafayette

Sweet Home Alabama
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