Arbitrator in a sentence as a noun

The arbitrator says 10% raise with free healthcare forever.

For example, two legal teams sit down with the arbitrator who looks at stuff and determines an amount $X that seems fair.

With Bitcoin, you can have any number of companies compete to be the arbitrator for your transactions.

[Disclosure: My wife is a full-time labor- and employment arbitrator.

If there are any problems with the sale, the buyer and the arbitrator could together send the money back from the multisig address to the buyer.

Look up sample arbitration clauses; most do not specify specific arbitrators.

Yes, currently you're expected to pay the arbitrator separately.

This surprised me so I googled it. Lo and behold [1]: According to an independent arbitrator last November, the daily absentee rate for the Oakland police department was more than 40 percent.

Arbitration is rigged against employees, because the company pays the arbitrator, and it never sees daylight, so the company doesn't fear the PR risks of discovery.

There are people with impressive titles like "arbitrator", "administrator", "bureaucrat".

The challenge for arbitration, programmatic or otherwise, is deciding who the arbitrator will be. One of the problems is that arbitrators have their own perverse incentive to decide things in the favor of "repeat players" rather than on a truly objective basis.

Interestingly, Bitcoin does support transactions which have a third party acting as an arbitrator; these transaction require the consent of two out of three participants in order for the money to be transferred.

Let me restate:Just so you know ahead of time: no company you do business with that has actual counsel is going to accept an arbitration clause affirming an agreement to use any specific arbitrator you've chosen; in all likelihood, most real companies will flatly refuse mandatory binding arbitration.

It has avoided the very thorny choice of law issues that can arise where the contracting parties are in different locations by essentially having the parties agree up front to be legally bound by what amounts to a free-floating form of law to be applied by the arbitrator regardless of what technical choice of law issues would normally prescribe.

It doesn't really fall under the definition of an escrow: a bond, deed, or other document kept in the custody\n of a third party and taking effect only when a specified\n condition has been fulfilled.\n\n [usually as modifier] a deposit or fund held in trust or\n as a security\n\nThe arbitrator gets "voting power" in regards to deciding where the funds goes, he doesn't keep it in his custody nor he have full control over it.

Arbitrator definitions

noun

someone chosen to judge and decide a disputed issue; "the critic was considered to be an arbiter of modern literature"; "the arbitrator's authority derived from the consent of the disputants"; "an umpire was appointed to settle the tax case"

See also: arbiter umpire