Again, ToS is not the law. I believe that if you fight it out with the right lawyer, you can invalidate their ToS.
Then again, if you have enough money to pay a lawyer, you should probably host with a reputable and proper web host, not a free forum service who can claim that they own the data just because they provide the service for free. It sounds absolutely ridiculous if you think about it right. How would it be if all free providers started laying claim on their users' data by simply modifying their ToS?
Does that mean that google can claim that all the mail hosted on their gmail is theirs because they happen to provide it for free? Imagine the uproar and the legal ramifications if that happens!
Then again, if you have enough money to pay a lawyer, you should probably host with a reputable and proper web host, not a free forum service who can claim that they own the data just because they provide the service for free. It sounds absolutely ridiculous if you think about it right. How would it be if all free providers started laying claim on their users' data by simply modifying their ToS?
Does that mean that google can claim that all the mail hosted on their gmail is theirs because they happen to provide it for free? Imagine the uproar and the legal ramifications if that happens!