AT&T Blinks...

| No Comments

I try not to just blatantly repost things I see on other blogs, but this one is worth boosting up a little bit.

About a week ago, it came to light that AT&T had truly heinous restrictions in their contracts that gave them the legal right to terminate your account if you said anything bad about them.

AT&T tried wiggle around it, saying they'd never actually prosecute using that clause, but the blogosphere wouldn't let it go.

Yesterday, AT&T revised their contract:

5.1 Suspension/Termination. AT&T respects freedom of expression and believes it is a foundation of our free society to express differing points of view. AT&T will not terminate, disconnect or suspend service because of the views you or we express on public policy matters, political issues or political campaigns. However, AT&T may immediately terminate or suspend all or a portion of your Service, any Member ID, electronic mail address, IP address, Universal Resource Locator or domain name used by you, without notice, for conduct that AT&T believes (a) violates the Acceptable Use Policy; or (b) constitutes a violation of any law, regulation or tariff (including, without limitation, copyright and intellectual property laws) or a violation of these TOS, or any applicable policies or guidelines. Your Service may be suspended or terminated if your payment is past due and such condition continues un-remedied for thirty (30) days. Termination or suspension by AT&T of Service also constitutes termination or suspension (as applicable) of your license to use any Software. AT&T may also terminate or suspend your Service if you provide false or inaccurate information that is required for the provision of Service or is necessary to allow AT&T to bill you for Service.

As someone who is seriously considering an iPhone sometime in the not too distant future, seeing activism generating a positive response from the vendor is heartening.

Score one for the good guys.

(Thanks to boingboing for the article.)


Leave a comment

Pages

OpenID accepted here Learn more about OpenID
Powered by Movable Type 4.23-en

Twitter

Sponsors!

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by dbs published on October 11, 2007 10:41 AM.

Sick Day was the previous entry in this blog.

The XO Laptop - OLPC comes true. is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.