Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 3rd Jul 2012 19:15 UTC, submitted by tupp
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RE[3]: I'd worry about deed restrictions then
by WereCatf on Wed 4th Jul 2012 19:44
in reply to "RE[2]: I'd worry about deed restrictions then"
They are the same. A legal agreement that extends beyond the sale. That is the very basis of a deed restriction. What do you think protects a deed restriction? It is an agreement formed at the time of sale. It continues on to any other sale. It can't get any more simple than that.
No, when you sell real estate/land/etc. you actually sign paperwork. EULA != paperwork. You do not sign anything when you buy most forms of software. That is one clear difference between these, something that should be ridiculously obvious. Secondly, real estate/land/etc. are not shelf products, something that should be just as obvious.
RE[3]: I'd worry about deed restrictions then
by Soulbender on Thu 5th Jul 2012 06:36
in reply to "RE[2]: I'd worry about deed restrictions then"
A legal agreement that extends beyond the sale
And pray tell, do these deeds often prohibit you from selling the real estate that you own? No? Didn't think so.
Even if it did it's irrelevant though. Deeds are contracts entered into by two parties and no contracts exist when you purchase consumer shelf products. (No, EULAs are not contracts).




Member since:
2007-04-13
You can't see the truth when you are so set against or for a position it seems.
They are the same. A legal agreement that extends beyond the sale. That is the very basis of a deed restriction. What do you think protects a deed restriction? It is an agreement formed at the time of sale. It continues on to any other sale. It can't get any more simple than that.