
Terms And Conditions May Apply examines the cost of so-called 'free' services and the continuing disappearance of online privacy. People may think they know what they give up when they click 'I Agree' on companies like Facebook and Google. They're wrong.... (Full plot summary below)
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Terms And Conditions May Apply examines the cost of so-called 'free' services and the continuing disappearance of online privacy. People may think they know what they give up when they click 'I Agree' on companies like Facebook and Google. They're wrong.
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| The Film StageJohn FinkDocumentaries like this are useful, entertaining and engaging, summing up an ever-changing argument. |
| Village VoiceChris PackhamA wide-ranging, if shallow, exploration of intrusive government surveillance practices. |
| TheFilmFile.comDustin PutmanA riveting, fast-paced documentary about our increasing lack of privacy in a world overrun by social media, "Terms and Conditions May Apply" is skillfully pieced together like a first-rate thriller. |
| Globe and MailPhil BrownNot just a documentary about Internet privacy, but a non-fiction horror flick for anyone who blindly agrees to user licensing agreements online (a.k.a. everyone). |
| NYC Movie GuruAvi OfferDisturbing and enraging. It raises awareness about the searing topic of invasion of privacy in an entertaining, easy-to-follow fashion that includes comic relief and doesn't resort to merely one talking head after another. |
| Film Journal InternationalKevin LallyOne of the most important and eye-opening films of the year, a brisk compendium of the ways the websites and web businesses we all use exploit our personal data. |
| Shockya.comBrent SimonAn engaging and rather scary nonfiction look at the death-by-papercut of online privacy. |
| Flick FilosopherMaryAnn JohansonNobody reads the terms-and-conditions of Web sites. They're designed to discourage us from doing so... and there's a reason why. |
| Los Angeles TimesSheri LindenIn inverse proportion to typically long-winded, inscrutable terms of service, the film is concise, direct and thoroughly engaging. |
| VarietyJoe LeydonDeftly balancing twin goals of informing and entertaining, the pic matter-of-factly details the various ways that marketers, multinational corporations, police departments and government-run intelligence-gathering organizations obtain and exploit info. |