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  2. Terms of service - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terms_of_service

    Terms of service (also known as terms of use and terms and conditions, commonly abbreviated as TOS or ToS, ToU or T&C) are the legal agreements between service ...

  3. Summary of the Oath Terms of Service - AOL

    legal.aol.com/legacy/tos/index.html

    If You Post Content On a Service, You: May post content that you create or have been given permission to post by the owner, is legal, and doesn't violate the TOS Are responsible for content that you post to our services and assume all risks of posting personal information online

  4. Terms of Service - AOL Legal

    legal.aol.com/legacy/terms-of-service/full-terms/...

    Our provision of those fee-based Services will be governed by the terms you agree to when you register for the fee-based Service and any terms in this TOS not inconsistent with those terms. If you register for a fee-based Service, you must designate a payment method and provide us with accurate billing and payment information.

  5. Breach of contract - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breach_of_contract

    Breach of a condition of a contract is known as a repudiatory breach. Again, a repudiatory breach entitles the innocent party at common law to (1) terminate the contract, and (2) claim damages. No other type of breach except a repudiatory breach is sufficiently serious to permit the innocent party to terminate the contract for breach.

  6. Contractual term - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contractual_term

    Conditions are major provision terms that go to the very root of a contract breach of which means there has been substantial failure to perform a basic element in the agreement. Breach of a condition will entitle the innocent party to terminate the contract. [3] A warranty [4] is less imperative than a condition, so the contract will survive a ...

  7. AOL Terms of Service information

    help.aol.com/articles/account-management-aol...

    © 2025 Yahoo. All rights reserved.

  8. Tortious interference - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tortious_interference

    Inducing a breach of contract was a tort of accessory liability, and an intention to cause a breach of contract was a necessary and sufficient requirement for liability; a person had to know that he was inducing a breach of contract and to intend to do so; that a conscious decision not to inquire into the existence of a fact could be treated as ...

  9. Contract - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contract

    In the United Kingdom and Singapore, breach of contract is defined in the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 as: [i] non-performance, [ii] poor performance, [iii] part-performance, or [iv] performance which is substantially different from what was reasonably expected. [102]