Replies

  • Thank you. Greatly appreciated.  I never knew this.  I wont submit a review anyhow since scanning the terms of service is way more than I wish to read and absorbe.  Would rather work on a new painting.  

    • LOL. Hi Barry, I'm thinking this problem has occurred on ArtShowReviews.com. I know there is a big disclaimer there, but when we set up that site the legalese was necessary, or so my lawyer told me. It is boilerplate small print, and since you are doing nothing nefarious I wouldn't worry about it.

      • I check this again, now a few years later to see if anything has changed.  Its still a long lawyer thing that I wont read.   A short "plain  English"  version is what most people do.  Its no problem  except ATI missed about 50 reviews , all on shows that are not even listed.  Don't worry about it does not cut it for many people.  Always know exactly what you are signing. It could some day come back to haunt you .   I think you need  pay the cost and get a good new lawyer.

      • Just seems to me that any disclaimer I have ever seen is about one paragraph with a half dozen sentences.  Now what is LOL ?   I think L.O.L. might mean lots of luck but wouldnt understand its context here.

        • Laughing Out Loud.

          If it's REALLY funny, then ROFL or ROTFL

          Rolling on (the) Floor, Lauging.

          It means that Connie is amused that you are scared off by the big bad lawyer dudes and their fancy lawyer-talk. Belly up to the bar, live a little. Give us your impression of the show you were going to write up. Nobody reads those things, anyway.

          • Good reply, Jim. Actually thinking it meant "lots of luck" would have been pretty snarky of me, but while we're at it: rofl-50476.jpg

            Not.

            In other words, Barry, "the lawyer made me do it."

          • Sorry, I had to read that one twice ;-) It was the small print no one reads, not the show reviews. My eyeballs are bulging out right now from rephrasing sentences for clarity on a paper I'm doing for the SLAF mock jury workshop. The last time I wrote something this long it was for a grad course in college. I think it's time for a beer break :-)

  • A URL is a uniform resource locator. It's a web address.

    Larry Berman

  • Barry:  The URL is the same thing as a website address.  It starts with "www.", as in www.artfairinsiders.com

    I can't help you with the 2013 issue.  I have a suspicion, though, that you are on a page that enables you to click a button next to a text box that is currently showing 2012.  Click the button and, if I am right, you will see 2013 listed.  Click the text reading 2013 and it will display in the text box. 

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