I couldn't find anything regarding the law. I would be going to the Gamestop dumpster, seen some people get some posters, Gba games, An N64, and a bunch of ps2 and game cube games.
Wouldn't it technically be classed as theft even though it's been thrown out?
No. No it isn't.
Have fun looking through rubbish!
I think it'd make more sense to Google Arizona state and local laws rather than posting a question on a gaming board...
"Gamers eat food, therefore I must post my recipes on this site."I think it'd make more sense to Google Arizona state and local laws rather than posting a question on a gaming board...
Pretty sure other gamers have done this.
Oh! Isn't this a "gaming" board?
I reject your theory.
I think it'd make more sense to Google Arizona state and local laws rather than posting a question on a gaming board...
Pretty sure other gamers have done this.
Oh! Isn't this a "gaming" board?
I reject your theory.
I think it'd make more sense to Google Arizona state and local laws rather than posting a question on a gaming board...
Pretty sure other gamers have done this.
Oh! Isn't this a "gaming" board?
I reject your theory.
You can "reject my theory" all you want. Fact of the matter is, you're asking about laws concerning a specific action in a specific area of the U.S. on a global gaming board... All anyone here can do is google it for you or guess. Why not save them the trouble and google it yourself?
and what the hell happened to the internet over the past couple years that 3 out of 5 people now talk/write like Sheldon from The Big Bang Theory...? "I reject your theory" "fallacies! everywhere!"...straw men... wtf...
This about sums it up. If you're interested, you should also look up how Food not Bombs manages to get much of its food. It's sad how much is wasted by large chain stores when they could easily donate what they're planning on tossing out.Wouldn't it technically be classed as theft even though it's been thrown out?
Depends on the state, but most states deem it Public Domain once an item of any value lands itself in a waste receptacle.
Now, that becomes null and void if you have to go onto private property (parking lots, fenced areas, etc...)
Most businesses won't MIND, however, if you dumpster dive, as long as you don't make a mess, and you don't cause a lot of drama.
HOWEVER, chains or locks around a dumpster means absolutely and unquestioningly, that NO, you cannot dumpster dive on this property and doing so will most likely land you in legal trouble.
Take it from a former for-profit dumpster diver.
This Thread Creeps Me Out
Don't take my profile picture personal to this topic. That's not me. I swear lol. For the laughs.
Don't take my profile picture personal to this topic. That's not me. I swear lol. For the laughs.
Well.....
Now we know for sure it's you.