Over the weekend, fans of Ubisoft games underwent a minor panic as a rumor spread that Ubisoft might be spontaneously deleting inactive Ubisoft accounts, permanently destroying digital game libraries if users didn't log on often enough. However, Ubisoft has now clarified that users' digital game libraries are safe.
If I am reading this correctly which probably I am not, 10k is very little for a class action so most wouldn’t be covered at all by this restriction, it seems like a way to not have lawyers costs for very small class actions, but big ones would be “allowed”
That again… I am probably misreading it, I am not a lawyer.
You are right, you are misreading it 😎. The $10,000 is for your personal claims, not the total class action value. Moreover, class action is prohibited twice here. The first clause:
claims must be brought in the parties’ individual capacity, and not as a plaintiff or class member in any purported class or representative proceeding
Has not dollar limit. The language here is extremely confusing because of the double repetition. I can’t even tell if the arbitration is “binding” or not. I’ll assume that it is, based on the legal principle “exception that proves the rule” combined with clause 13.2 c). Here’s my not-a-lawyer flowchart interpretation consistent with every clause:
if less than $10,000 in claims (99%+ of accounts), then:
must file Notice of Dispute
then if reject settlement offer, may file Demand for Arbitration OR file in small claims court
BUT you “waive any right to a trial by judge or jury”, and a court is presided by a judge, so… no small claims court for you!
(Any actual lawyer feel free to correct me in case a small claims court trial doesn’t count as a trial by a judge)
if more than $10,000 in claims (someone who somehow bought hundreds of ubisoft games?), then:
may file Notice of Dispute or skip it
then may file Demand for Arbitration OR file in small claims court
BUT small claims court limit is typically $5000-$10000, so… no small claims court for you!
UNLESS you live in one of 8 states with a higher limit, and have a claim of exactly between $10000 and $15000
in NO CASE may you be part of class action
Also, under clause 13.3 any legal action must be adjudicated in the courts of the State of California. I don’t know if that includes small claims courts, or if there is some legal tradition that small claims can always be filed in state of residence of the consumer. California has a $10k small claims limit, so if there is no such tradition, to me it appears there are NO situations where you can file any court case, big or small, consistent with these rules.
Don’t worry, they got it covered:
If I am reading this correctly which probably I am not, 10k is very little for a class action so most wouldn’t be covered at all by this restriction, it seems like a way to not have lawyers costs for very small class actions, but big ones would be “allowed” That again… I am probably misreading it, I am not a lawyer.
You are right, you are misreading it 😎. The $10,000 is for your personal claims, not the total class action value. Moreover, class action is prohibited twice here. The first clause:
Has not dollar limit. The language here is extremely confusing because of the double repetition. I can’t even tell if the arbitration is “binding” or not. I’ll assume that it is, based on the legal principle “exception that proves the rule” combined with clause 13.2 c). Here’s my not-a-lawyer flowchart interpretation consistent with every clause:
(Any actual lawyer feel free to correct me in case a small claims court trial doesn’t count as a trial by a judge)
Also, under clause 13.3 any legal action must be adjudicated in the courts of the State of California. I don’t know if that includes small claims courts, or if there is some legal tradition that small claims can always be filed in state of residence of the consumer. California has a $10k small claims limit, so if there is no such tradition, to me it appears there are NO situations where you can file any court case, big or small, consistent with these rules.