Društvo| Ekonomija| Satira

Sign Here

Chris Farmer RSS / 22.01.2015. u 10:45

In the shuffle, I probably signed a paper that allows the bank to change the date of my birthday if they want. I also signed to forfeit any presents I might get.

Today (and yesterday, and tomorrow since it is not quite finished) I opened a new bank account. In order to do so, I affixed my scrawling and somewhat easy-to-copy signature to at least fifty documents - none of which I read.

CHORUS: Sign here. And here. And one more here. And another one. Ok, now sign these twelve. No, not there - HERE! And this one.

Just out of curiosity, I stopped and asked the competent and smartly dressed young woman what I was signing on one particular page. She looked at the paper for a few minutes and said: "It's something you have to sign."

Ah, THAT is clear now.

With a slight cramp in my signing hand, I am now fairly sure that I have a new bank account. Or maybe as many as 17, although I am not sure. I also have a wide range of plasticized cards inscribed with hundreds of encrypted numbers, none of which means anything to me at all except that I must somehow know them all now.

I put my name to hundreds of clauses and articles and terms and conditions. And I did it quickly! We want to get out of the bank as fast as possible - so we sign and sign and sign. We trust that that competent and smartly dressed young woman has not woken up on the wrong side of the bed this morning and decided to make her clients sign up for yoga lessons, the communist party, and a referendum against the sale of cat food on Sundays.

CHORUS: Sign here. And here. And one more here. And another one. Ok, now sign these twelve. No, not there - HERE! And this one.

I have always operated on the principle of not signing any documents which I had not fully read and understood. The signature at the bottom of every page tells the world, "I agree with whatever is written here. Whatever it is."

The reality is that reading all the papers I needed to sign would have taken me the better part of a month. This is not a matter of the fine print (which I could not see anyway without new glasses and a magnifying glass), but rather the Regular Print, thesigning21093 stuff that is presented clearly and concisely and spread over ten thousand pages. It is the sheer volume that kills us. We see the papers, we know we should read them, and we sign our lives away all the same.

As an overall banking experience, I give it high marks. Everything was fast and efficient and very unlike a police interrogation (as I had been expecting). I left feeling satisfied and accomplished. I would gladly sign a letter of recommendation for the competent and smartly dressed young woman that helped me.

But it turns out I already did.

 

 

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More blogs on Chris Farmer's official site: The Standard Deviation

Atačmenti



Komentari (13)

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cane cane 10:49 22.01.2015

wow

a full text, what a surprise...
Chris Farmer Chris Farmer 10:50 22.01.2015

Re: wow

cane
a full text, what a surprise...


Let it not be said that I do not listen...
srdjan.pajic srdjan.pajic 16:34 22.01.2015

Re: wow

Chris Farmer
cane
a full text, what a surprise...


Let it not be said that I do not listen...


Approved!

And opening a bank account is nothing compared to what you have to go through for getting a loan. Hundreds of pages, so many that most of them you get to sign with initials only, otherwise you'd be risking serious hand injury or a carpal tunnel syndrome. I swear I tried to read all that shit, and I read it, but then, on the day of actual signing, even larger pile of documents was brought to be signed. The proverbial competent and well dressed woman this time actually went throuh each paper we were signing and gave us a quick summary of what was that we ware signing. After about fiftieth document I just stopped listening...
qqriq qqriq 11:00 22.01.2015

short version

is good enough for me:

Just out of curiosity, I stopped and asked the competent and smartly dressed young woman what I was signing on one particular page. She looked at the paper for a few minutes and said: "It's something you have to sign."

jinks jinks 11:09 22.01.2015

...

If you have, also, signed the contract depicted on the figure at the beginning of the blog, you better start to learn how to play a guitar.

Because, it seems that it is so far the only known way how to pull out from it :)


looping looping 11:56 22.01.2015

1

We trust that that competent and smartly dressed young woman has not woken up on the wrong side of the bed this morning and decided to make her clients sign up for yoga lessons, the communist party, and a referendum against the sale of cat food on Sundays.

That's not so bad.
It could also be the marriage license.



Edit:
BTW You look alike the guy on the left. Only he has no moustache.
Chris Farmer Chris Farmer 13:36 22.01.2015

Re: 1

looping
Edit:
BTW You look alike the guy on the left. Only he has no moustache.


And I don't know where to buy the hat!
looping looping 13:47 22.01.2015

Re: 1

Chris Farmer
looping
Edit:
BTW You look alike the guy on the left. Only he has no moustache.


And I don't know where to buy the hat!

Here. Full set.

It's not 100% same but it will do for emergency.

oh la la oh la la 13:56 22.01.2015

in france....

... you almost always have to preceed your signature by "read and approved" written in your own writing... which does not necessairly mean that you have actually read and approved the above text , just that you sign that you did
... but than, bureaucracy is the french invention, isn't it?
Chris Farmer Chris Farmer 14:01 22.01.2015

Re: in france....

Lu et approuvé (au moins en partie)
oh la la oh la la 14:14 22.01.2015

Re: in france....

or even

"lu et approuvé bon pour accord"
rade.radumilo rade.radumilo 15:51 22.01.2015

If you would feel better

Just out of curiosity, I stopped and asked the competent and smartly dressed young woman what I was signing on one particular page. She looked at the paper for a few minutes and said: "It's something you have to sign."


She actually doesn't know. However competent she is, it's just a bunch of templates in a database that get filled with the data, about you, that she entered to the same database. I should know, because long ago I've been creating those templates, and the database, and the filling process for a lot of banks around here.
She doesn't actually know what is in those templates, and for that matter it may just be that nobody in the bank does, because the only person that actually knew what is in those documents may have already retired, or decided to pursue another career. The IT guys don't know what's in them, because they just copy and paste what was given to them. The person that has, may be, replaced the author of those documents probably didn't read them at all and won't do so until asked to introduce some changes.
There you have it. You don't know what is it that you have signed, and the bank doesn't know what is it that you have signed. Enjoy!

Chris Farmer Chris Farmer 16:04 22.01.2015

Re: If you would feel better

Brilliant! And I have shared the clip!

Arhiva

   

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