TOS Reviews
We ran AI analysis on the Terms of Service of the apps you use every day. The results might surprise you.
Every photo you post gives Meta a worldwide, royalty-free license to use, modify, and distribute your content — and they can sublicense it to anyone.
Adobe
8/10Cancel Adobe Creative Cloud early and you'll pay a 50% penalty on your remaining contract — and the FTC says Adobe deliberately hid this fee.
X (Twitter)
8/10X collects data on you even if you don't have an account — and your posts are now training Grok AI whether you like it or not.
Pinterest updated its terms to train AI on every pin you've ever posted — retroactively — and explicitly states you won't be compensated.
Uber
7.5/10Uber's terms say they're not a transportation company — they're a "technology platform" — and that distinction lets them dodge liability when things go wrong.
Amazon
7.5/10That Kindle book you "bought" for $14.99? You don't own it. Amazon can remove it from your device at any time — and they've done it before.
Fiverr
7/10The moment a buyer clicks "Complete" on Fiverr, the intellectual property of your work transfers to them — and Fiverr takes a 20% cut for facilitating that transfer.
Airbnb
7/10Airbnb's liability for a bad stay is capped at the cost of your booking — even if the property is dangerous, misrepresented, or uninhabitable.
Upwork
7/10Upwork takes up to 10% of every dollar you earn, can freeze your funds for 30+ days, and can permanently ban you without a meaningful appeals process.
ChatGPT (OpenAI)
6.5/10OpenAI says you own your outputs — but there's a catch: AI-generated content might not be copyrightable, so you could "own" something you can't legally protect.
Spotify
6/10Spotify was fined $6 million for GDPR violations — they couldn't even tell users how long they keep your data or why.
Canva
6/10Canva's terms grant them a license to use your uploaded designs for AI training, product improvement, and marketing — and most designers never notice.
Slack
5.5/10Your boss can read every DM you've ever sent on Slack — yes, even the "private" ones — and Slack's terms make that perfectly clear.
Netflix
5.5/10Netflix can raise your price, change your plan features, and remove any show from your library — all without asking your permission first.
Notion
5/10You trust Notion with your entire second brain — meeting notes, business plans, passwords. But have you read what they can do with it?
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