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Submission + - Vote Swapping Ruled Legal!

cayenne8 writes: Way back when (2000), during that election, there were some sites set up (voteswap.com and votexchange.com) for people across the nation to agree to swap votes. This was set up mostly for Nader and Gore voters to work against Bush.

California representatives threatened to proscute these sites as criminal offenses, and many of them shut down. On Monday, the 9th US court of appeals upheld that "the websites' vote-swapping mechanisms as well as the communication and vote swaps they enabled were constitutionally protected" and California's spurious threats violated the First Amendment. The 9th Circuit also said the threats violated the U.S. Constitution's Commerce Clause."

See the story HERE .

Comment Re:How (Score 1) 666

What gets me is that you can go to the store and purchase a copy of some kind of software. You get home and attempt to install it and you don't like the terms of the EULA, what is your recourse if you don't like the terms of the EULA? Most stores have a policy of no opened software returns, only an exchange for another copy of the software. So, by not agreeing to the terms of the EULA you have given money away in exchange for a useless copy of whatever software with no way of getting a refund for your purchase. The guy is probably gonna get raped in court but I can't see how it is fair or just that a person either accept the EULA or be out their money with no or little possibility of a refund.

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