"Fine print" was designed intentionally to not be read. If people read the fine print on products made by large corporations they
certainly wouldn't buy them.
So you saying then that is would fall in the category of "Hidden" information if it only exist in find print, and is not disclosed verbally at time of purchase. And then I would agree that it is news.
Correct, they do this for vehicles with a very large waitlist of hopeful purchasers, otherwise the initial buyers could essentially just be auctioning off their purchase of a very limited model to the highest bidder. Presumably Tesla would do this only temporarily, as this is supposedly going to be a high volume vehicle.
So you saying then that is would fall in the category of "Hidden" information if it only exist in find print, and is not disclosed verbally at time of purchase. And then I would agree that it is news.
Easy peasy, sell the company that OWNs the truck.
As long as one knows that going into the deal, and it is not hidden, I don't see how that is any kind of scam, or even worth news.
"Fine print" was designed intentionally to not be read. If people read the fine print on products made by large corporations they certainly wouldn't buy them.
So you saying then that is would fall in the category of "Hidden" information if it only exist in find print, and is not disclosed verbally at time of purchase. And then I would agree that it is news.
Yes, hidden in wordy, verbal diarrhea that is designed for the regular-joe not to comprehend
you're joking right?
Do know know another car company that doesn't let you sell your own car?
Is also newsworthy because lots of people won't read the entire legal papers.
Ford was in the news for a while doing this with their last Ford GT. Tesla isn’t the first.
is this for speciality models? looking it up Ford was only making 500 GTs
it's for the first year, so it might be about folks flipping the truck. Like sneakers or something.
Correct, they do this for vehicles with a very large waitlist of hopeful purchasers, otherwise the initial buyers could essentially just be auctioning off their purchase of a very limited model to the highest bidder. Presumably Tesla would do this only temporarily, as this is supposedly going to be a high volume vehicle.
I mean, Ferrari is pretty shit when it comes to any modifications or selling to someone they don't authorize.
So you saying then that is would fall in the category of "Hidden" information if it only exist in find print, and is not disclosed verbally at time of purchase. And then I would agree that it is news.
Tuck Fesla!