Interpretation is always part of what follows a contract. That's why we have so many folks suing each other. Both parties usually claim that something is "obvious". But obviously the only obvious thing is that they obviously disagree (pun intended).
Interpretation always goes along with any communication. Even if you don't want to use subjective interpretation, you always do when you listen to someone or read some text. It's your context, your bringup, your education, your cultural, your linguistic knowledge that shapes your thoughts and understanding about things. It's only natural e.g. that I read the part of the terms of service that Holina cites differently than you do.
And it's neither bad nor good, it's just the way it is.
Misunderstanding this basic principle is often what leads to frustration and rage and prevents detecting and resolving miscommunication.
Interpretation always goes along with any communication. Even if you don't want to use subjective interpretation, you always do when you listen to someone or read some text. It's your context, your bringup, your education, your cultural, your linguistic knowledge that shapes your thoughts and understanding about things. It's only natural e.g. that I read the part of the terms of service that Holina cites differently than you do.
And it's neither bad nor good, it's just the way it is.
Misunderstanding this basic principle is often what leads to frustration and rage and prevents detecting and resolving miscommunication.