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Let us imagine I have written a site and intend to put it online.

Do I need a lawyer to write the ToS and to process all those "legal requests"? Do I need any ToS at all?

From what I regularly come to read here and there, it is almost unavoidable to be pulled in a legal dispute sooner or later.

What is more interesting, if we talk about ToS, according to the laws of what country to write them? All sites are generally open worldwide to all nations. Laws often contradict. In some countries the site owner is not responsible for the users' content, in other he is. What to do if I come from one country and live in the other? Where should such disputes be processed?

Or is this legal stuff not that important until you grow very very very big?

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In some countries, it is even illegal to give legal advice without being qualified; so you're better off seeking professional legal advice (which I guess implies a "yes") – Rowland Shaw Jun 29 at 16:16
This is not, at all programming related. Yes, many software projects need a web site .. if this question was about HTML, JS, Etc .. I would not have voted to close it. – Tim Post Jun 29 at 16:21
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It may not be directly related to programming - but it is directly related to programmers! Where would you suggest one asks a question like this? – Jim Evans Jun 29 at 16:22
I suggest asking it at discuss.joelonsoftware.com/?biz – ChrisW Jun 29 at 16:30
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I'm a programmer, and I find this interesting and relevant. – Avi Jun 29 at 17:37
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closed as not programming related by Mark Biek, Ray Hayes, Rowland Shaw, Jonathan Sampson, gnovice Jun 29 at 16:20

4 Answers

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If you're worried, you should definitely pay a lawyer for a consult. The real answer is that it depends and really, you shouldn't trust anything resembling legal advice from a what people tell you on a website.

Contrary to the impression you may get from reading online, most sites don't get any serious legal threats. Bogus legal threats do happen, but they're usually easy to identify and safe to ignore.

Personally, I probably wouldn't worry unless I was doing something likely to get me sued.

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It depends on the kind of the website. I don't think that you'll definitely be pulled into some legal stuff if you have a simple service or something like that. You should have a look at ToS on the similar sites and check if they suit you.

Oh, and as for the laws, I'm confident that you should write your terms according to the laws of your country.

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If you understand other companies' terms of service decently, you should be able to adapt what you want out of them. Generally, you may not know what you need to watch out for in terms of liability protection; lawyers may not know either. Lawyers tend to err on the side of over protection, leading to draconian sets of rules.

It's a good idea to start with terms of service, especially relating to how you will use people's data. If you are able to stick to what it says in your terms, you may be able to get away without them until you get bigger. When you are bigger, you are a more lucrative target for litigation, and would definitely need them.

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Depends on the scope of the site.

Are you storing user info? How sensitive?
Are you selling something?
Is some sort of service supplied?
Will copyright possibly be an issue?

EDIT: RE: Location - I believe the law applies to the country in which the 'owner' resides.

EDIT again: The gyst of it is - If it is likely at all that you will encounter legal disputes - yes.

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