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The main office is in Sunnyvail, Ca. That, last time I checked was in the USA.

2007-12-04 00:39:34 · 13 answers · asked by Anonymous in Politics & Government Politics

okay sorry, type-o hit the two instead of one... sue me.

2007-12-04 00:49:19 · update #1

James... you the man. Yes!!!

2007-12-04 02:00:08 · update #2

13 answers

OK, ya got the Amendment thing corrected...now to the substance:

While Yahoo Answers is not obligated to allow free speech on thus site, they ARE obligated to uphold their Terms of Service...PROPERLY !

In this they fail miserably !!!

Clowns on this site have multiple ID's they use to violate anybody they disagree with, or call their bluff, and Y/A Staff does nothing about them. There is one character that I have had run ins with that claims he is a "Federal Law Enforcement Officer", and has at least 20 Y/A id's . Yet all the messages sent to YA Staff protesting his bogus violating goes unresolved with "form email reponses" from YA.

Until Yahoo Answers fixes this kind of abuse, it pretty much means Yahoo wants only it's version of the truth to be the reality.

2007-12-04 02:02:03 · answer #1 · answered by commanderbuck383 5 · 1 0

You don't have any constitutional rights against a private company. The individual who posted above is absolutely correct. You can thumb us down all you want, but it won't change the law -- the Constitution defines the limits of the government's -- THE GOVERNMENT'S, THE GOVERNMENT'S -- power over individuals and private entities, not the authority of individuals and private entities over each other.

A word of advice: Before citing the Constitution, please read the damned thing, okay? Might save you a lot of embarrassment in the future.

2007-12-04 01:23:36 · answer #2 · answered by Rеdisca 5 · 1 0

No, truthfully we like the form. fairly the area the place it lists the powers of Congress, and then says the powers no longer given to the federal government are reserved for the states or the individuals.

2016-10-19 02:56:40 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Yahoo is not run by the government. It is a private company and you agreed to the terms of service before joining. You have the right to not join if you do not agree to the terms.

2007-12-04 00:53:05 · answer #4 · answered by Bryan H 3 · 1 2

The 2nd amendment only applies to government interference of free speech. Last time I checked Yahoo is not a government entity.

2007-12-04 00:43:34 · answer #5 · answered by beren 7 · 3 3

Last I checked Yahoo is not a government institution, but rather a private business thus they are not restricted to the Constitution.

2007-12-04 00:43:11 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 3

A congressman called Yahoo "moral pygmies" in a congressional hearing.

So, does it matter to Yahoo?

2007-12-04 00:42:34 · answer #7 · answered by Duminos 2 · 2 2

Ya its the first amendment-----the only case you could make against Yahoo is if they discriminated based on race or religion or gender

2007-12-04 00:48:37 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 3

What Yahoo does or doesn't do has no effect on your freedom of speech.

Which is, incidentally, the FIRST amendment.

2007-12-04 00:43:46 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 3 3

The terms of service would not be a problem if they would enforce them properly.

2007-12-04 00:44:37 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 4 3

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