Practice Changes Sample Clauses

Practice Changes. As soon as practicable, and in no event later than six months after the Effective Date, ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ (defined for purposes of this paragraph to include present and future, direct and indirect corporate subsidiaries, related entities and affiliates, predecessors, and successors but not franchisees) will implement the following practice changes:
Practice Changes. (a) The Parties have negotiated practice changes and enhancements by Defendant relating to its “Inquiry Challenge Process.” These practice changes are an integral component of the Settlement. These practice changes include how Defendant shall, in the future, handle consumer disputes and/or challenges of hard inquiries in order to ensure that its subscribers have a permissible purpose to obtain consumer reports. For purposes of the “Inquiry Challenge Process,” a “challenge” includes all written disputes of hard inquiries which would result in the sending of a “502 Letter.” (b) Each month, Defendant shall prepare a report that contains a 12 month rolling volume for each subscriber and identifies each subscriber’s monthly inquiry volume, inquiry challenge volume, and inquiry challenge rate (challenge volume divided by inquiry volume). If a subscriber in the top 80% of the monthly inquiry challenge volume had an increase in challenge rate of more than 20% over the prior month, Defendant will manually review data associated with that subscriber for potential referral to recredentialing. Defendant also will manually review data associated with low volume subscribers with an inquiry challenge rate exceeding 80% for potential referral to recredentialing. Manual review will consider certain data points to eliminate potential false positives including, but not limited to, conditions of evidenced seasonality, availability of adequate data to support a referral to recredentialing, market conditions causing data anomalies, and new data conditions that may impact the referral program. Where a referral to recredentialing is not fully warranted, Defendant shall monitor those subscribers for a secondary review the next month with the same review criteria. (c) Upon referral, Defendant will either suspend/cancel the subscriber’s contract or recredential the subscriber, emphasizing that consumer reports may only be sought or obtained for a permissible purpose as set forth in 15 U.S.C. § 1681b. In addition, for those subscribers that are either not recredentialed and/or are terminated, Defendant will retroactively change all hard inquiries for that subscriber to soft inquiries from either (a) the identifiable date of improper pulling of credit reports or (b) a period of one year prior to termination if that date is not identifiable. (d) To the extent that Congress, any regulatory authority or court requires Defendant in the future to take a different approach to (a) handling d...
Practice Changes. 35. Stipulating Party agrees that, as soon as practicable, and in no event later than 150 days after the filing of the first motion for preliminary approval of this Settlement Agreement, Stipulating Party (defined for purposes of this paragraph to include present and future, direct and indirect corporate subsidiaries, related entities and affiliates, predecessors, and successors, but not franchisees) will implement the following practice changes: i. advise and periodically remind Stipulating Party’s company-owned brokerages, franchisees (if any), and their agents that there is no Stipulating Party requirement that they must make offers to or must accept offers of compensation from cooperating brokers or that, if made, such offers must be blanket, unconditional, or unilateral; ii. require that any Stipulating Party company-owned brokerages and their agents (and recommend and encourage that any franchisees and their agents) disclose to prospective home sellers and buyers and state in conspicuous language that broker commissions are not set by law and are fully negotiable (i) in their listing agreement if it is not a government or MLS-specified form, (ii) in their buyer representation agreement if there is one and it is not a government or MLS-specified form, and (iii) in pre-closing disclosure documents if there are any and they are not government or MLS-specified forms. In the event that the listing agreement, buyer representation agreement, or pre-closing disclosure documents is a government or MLS-specified form, then Stipulating Party will require that any company-owned brokerages and their agents (and recommend and encourage that any Stipulating Party franchisees and their agents) include a disclosure with conspicuous language expressly stating that broker commissions are not set by law and are fully negotiable; iii. prohibit all Stipulating Party company-owned brokerages and their agents acting as buyer representatives (and recommend and encourage that franchisees and their agents acting as buyer representatives refrain) from advertising or otherwise representing that their services are free; iv. require that company owned brokerages and their agents disclose at the earliest moment possible any offer of compensation made in connection with each active listing shared with prospective buyers in any format; v. prohibit company owned brokerages and their agents (and recommend and encourage that any franchisees and their agents refrain) from utilizing any t...
Practice Changes. 35. ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ MLS agrees that, as soon as practicable, and in no event later than 150 days after the filing of the first motion for preliminary approval of the Settlement Agreement, each Stipulating MLS will implement the following practice changes: i. eliminate any requirement by the MLS that listing brokers or sellers must make offers of compensation to buyer brokers or other buyer representatives (either directly or through buyers), and eliminate any requirement that such offers, if made, must be blanket, unconditional, or unilateral; ii. prohibit the MLS Participants, subscribers, other real estate brokers, other real estate agents, and sellers from (a) making offers of compensation on the multiple listing service to cooperating brokers or other buyer representatives (either directly or through buyers); or (b) disclosing on the multiple listing service listing broker compensation or total brokerage compensation (i.e., the combined compensation to both listing brokers and cooperating brokers); iii. eliminate all broker compensation fields on the MLS, and prohibit the sharing of offers of compensation to buyer brokers or other buyer representatives via any other fields on the MLS; iv. eliminate and prohibit any requirements conditioning multiple listing service participation or membership in an MLS on offering or accepting compensation to buyer brokers or other buyer representatives; v. agree not to create, facilitate, or support any non-MLS mechanism (including by providing listing information to an internet aggregators’ website for such purpose) for listing brokers or sellers to make offers of compensation to buyer brokers or other buyer representatives (either directly or through buyers), however, this provision is not violated by (a) an MLS providing data or data feeds to a REALTOR®, MLS Participant, or third party unless the MLS knows those data or data feeds are being used directly or indirectly to establish or maintain a platform for offers of compensation from multiple brokers (i.e., the MLS cannot intentionally circumvent this requirement); or (b) a REALTOR® or MLS Participant displaying both (1) data or data feeds from an MLS and (2) offers of compensation to buyer brokers or other buyer representatives but only on listings from their own brokerage;
Practice Changes. 31. Within 90 days of the Effective Date, Yahoo shall modify the subscription page for ▇▇▇▇▇▇.▇▇▇ to present the automatic renewal terms in a clear and conspicuous manner for California customers before a subscription agreement is fulfilled and in visual proximity to the request to consent to the subscription offer. Nothing in this paragraph shall prohibit ▇▇▇▇▇▇.▇▇▇ from making changes to the way in which it presents the automatic renewal terms for California customers should there be any future changes to the substantive law.
Practice Changes. As soon as practicable, and in no event later than six months after the Effective Date, @properties (defined for purposes of this paragraph to include present and future, direct and indirect corporate subsidiaries, related entities and affiliates, predecessors, and successors but not franchisees) will implement the following practice changes:
Practice Changes. As soon as practicable, and in no event later than six months after the Effective Date, First Team (defined for purposes of this paragraph to include present and future, direct and indirect corporate subsidiaries, related entities and affiliates, predecessors, and successors but not franchisees) will implement the following practice changes:
Practice Changes. Defendant affirmatively represents that it has changed its business practices to address the conduct complained of in the Action. In particular, Defendant represents that it has ceased the practice of having its employment background check provider send “fail” notifications via email to Starbucks branch managers regarding employment applicants, which could cause some store managers to move on to other applicants before any background check appeal was completed.
Practice Changes. Within forty-five (45) days after the Preliminary Approval Order, Defendant will suspend operation of the Facebook Tracking Pixel on any pages on Defendant’s Website that both includes video content and have a URL that substantially identifies specific video requested or obtained from that website webpage, unless and until the VPPA is amended, repealed, or otherwise invalidated (including by judicial decision on the use of website pixel technology by the United States Supreme Court, any federal court of appeals, a
Practice Changes. ▇▇ soon as practicable, and in no event later than three months after the Effective Date, eXp (defined for purposes of this paragraph to include present and future, direct and indirect corporate ​ subsidiaries, related entities and affiliates, predecessors, and successors) will implement the following practice changes in the United States: