this post was submitted on 25 Jun 2026
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Depends on the agreement. Contracts (like EULAs) can cover a fair bit
EULAs aren't legally binding in sane countries.
Can you name a country where signing up for a paid account to an online service, and using the service and paying the invoice that comes in, doesn't form a legally binding contract between the customer and the vendor?
Most countries in the EU don't allow for consumer rights to be overridden by an EULA.
Similarly, I can't have a contract with you to murder me. It's illegal and me being a willing participant in it does not make it legal, even if I sign a contract.
An EULA is legally binding, but only the parts that aren't in conflict with consumer rights, meaning most of any EULA is going to be invalid.