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#lang pollen
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◊(define-meta title "contracts")
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◊hanging-topic[(topic-from-metas metas)]{Use more white space; consider columns}
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Whether it’s a settlement agreement in PDF, a commercial lease on paper, or a terms-of-service agreement on a website, contracts are a diverse class of documents. Therefore, my typographic advice is more a principle than a prescription.
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Let’s move past the self-serving myth that typography in contracts doesn’t matter because people ◊em{must} read them. Wrong. As I said in ◊xref{why does typography matter}, readers are always looking for the exit. So the most we can say is that people are ◊em{supposed} to read contracts. As writers, we can encourage them. But can we force them? No way.
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In fact, it would be wiser for drafters to assume that ◊strong{most contracts go unread}. Why? Because no one wants to read a contract. And most contracts are poorly designed. Therefore, it doesn’t matter that people must read them. At best, they’re reading opportunistically. At worst, not at all.
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For instance, the other day, a certain music service made me promise that I had read their 20,551-word contract — 3,276 in ◊xref{all caps} — before I could buy a $1.29 song. What do you think I actually did? Right. What would you do? The same thing. And everyone else? They’re no different.
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◊before-and-after-pdfs["contract"]
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