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7 Reasons Why Your Company Needs a Privacy Policy |
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Source: Security Catalyst - Posted by Anthony Pell
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Non-attorneys are often (justifiably) baffled at why lawyers take 3,000 words to say what normal people say in 300 and a handshake. At the risk of defending verbosity, it turns out that behind each handshake contains a wide range of non-standard assumptions. Many (if not most) disputes arise when there is a misunderstanding about an unspoken assumption—the meaning of a word, or silence on a particular issue. That’s why it takes lawyers so many words to say something so simple; simple things are more complex than we thought.
Consider the telephone—an elegant piece of equipment which is exceedingly easy to use. Yet the infrastructure and technology supporting telephony and networking is extremely robust and complex. Consumers pay the telcos to worry about the millions of miles of copper and fiber, routers, substations and central offices. The infrastructure isn’t a “necessary evil,” it’s just necessary.
Creative Commons is the legal equivalent of the telephone. While the human-readable version of the “Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike” creative commons license consists of 5 images and 286 words, the legal version contains 3,384 words. Surely the work of a lawyer who needed to justify his existence, right?
Read this full article at Security Catalyst
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