You can not sign away your 'duty of care'. Even if disclaimers are signed, if anything seems amiss there will probably be an army of legal bods 'proving' that enough care was not taken and the waver was just an attempt to hoodwink people.nzjrs wrote: ↑19 Jun 2020, 20:02Depending on the jurisdiction, disclaimers are not always sufficient to protect one from negligent actions. Of course negligence is happily argued after the fact in court by expensive lawyers.subcritical71 wrote: ↑19 Jun 2020, 19:14I think it’s more of a ‘who will blink first’ mentality. The legal liability of mass infections are readily neutered by having fans acknowledge some legalese prior to the event. Even my local homeowners association has covered their ass for the common areas. The part waiting for a blink would be the millions of dollars in fees on the line and who needs to fork (or not) over the money may very well be determined by who cancelled the event (promoter, local government, FIA, Formula 1).
Big companies in particular will give very careful consideration before deciding, or say stay away in a grey tone and hope someone turns up.