On Wed, 28 Jan 2009, Steve Totaro wrote: > Back on topic. I am no lawyer, but I think a disclaimer is fine, > maybe signed prior to giving the customer a listing of the laws, state > by state.
Interesting. Nitzan emailed me (thanks!) and reminded me that Grand Central offers call recording. I read their Terms of Service and here's all they said about it: RECORDING CONVERSATIONS GrandCentral provides a function that allows Subscriber to record individual telephone conversations. The laws regarding the notice and notification requirements of such recorded conversations vary by state to state. Subscriber is responsible for applying the local laws in the relevant jurisdiction when using this feature. and INDEMNIFICATION Subscriber shall indemnify and hold harmless GrandCentral, its directors, officers, employees and agents from and against all liabilities, losses, costs, expenses (including reasonable attorneys' fees), and damages resulting from any negligent acts, omissions or willful misconduct by Subscriber, Subscriber's use of the Services and/or any breach of the terms and conditions of this Agreement by Subscriber. and RULES AND REGULATIONS [portions omitted] * Subscriber shall be solely liable for any transmissions sent through the Service. GrandCentral has no control over the content of any transmission nor will it be liable for such content. Subscriber agrees to abide by all applicable local, state, national, foreign and international laws and regulations and is solely responsible for all acts or omissions that occur under Subscriber's account or password, including the content of Subscriber's transmissions through the Service. I'm guessing Google's lawyers spent extra special time after acquisition of GrandCentral to make sure the Terms were solid. Again, I'm assuming here, but it does pretty much cover: * You can record, but YOU are responsible for following the laws * If you break the law with our service, you hold us harmless. * YOU are solely liable for any transmissions. And you agree to follow the law. Of course, if GrandCentral gets sued, who knows how the Terms will hold up in court, but I really don't hear much about companies getting sued for enabling the recording of phone calls. Can Radio Shack be sued because it sold someone a device they could plug into their phone and record calls? Sure, anybody can get sued, but I doubt Radio Shack would actually be found guilty. Thanks all for your replies. I'm still listening if anyone has more to add! Beckman --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Peter Beckman Internet Guy beck...@angryox.com http://www.angryox.com/ --------------------------------------------------------------------------- _______________________________________________ --Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com-- asterisk-biz mailing list To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-biz