Every app, platform, and SaaS tool has Terms of Service that nobody reads. They're deliberately long and complex so you'll skip to "I agree." But buried in those terms are clauses about who owns your data, what happens if the service shuts down, and whether you've waived your right to sue.
Plain English summary
Full document condensed into simple language
Risk flags with severity
High, medium, low — with recommendations
Obligations extracted
Financial, performance, reporting, restrictions
Key dates & deadlines
Renewals, notice periods, milestones
Legal glossary
Terms defined in your document's context
Who this is for
Whether you're reviewing your first contract or your hundredth, LegalSimpler gives you the clarity to negotiate from a position of knowledge.
Risks we catch
It's unclear whether you own the data you upload or if the platform gets a broad license to use, modify, and distribute it however they want.
They can increase prices with as little as 7 days notice — or sometimes none at all. Your only option is to cancel.
By agreeing, you waive your right to sue in court or join a class action. All disputes are resolved privately, often in their jurisdiction.
By posting or uploading content, you grant them a worldwide, irrevocable, perpetual license to use it however they want — even after you delete your account.
They can shut down the service, delete all your data, and owe you nothing — not even a refund for prepaid subscriptions.
Your account can be suspended or permanently terminated at their "sole discretion" without prior notice or explanation.
What people miss
These are the things we see most often — and the ones that cost people the most.
Major tech companies often have the most aggressive TOS because they have the best lawyers and millions of users who won't read them. Size doesn't equal fairness.
If the TOS doesn't guarantee data portability, you could lose years of work if you switch platforms or if they shut down. Check for data export rights before committing.
Many platforms update their TOS regularly and notify you via email you'll never read. "Continued use constitutes acceptance" means you're agreeing to new terms automatically.
Works with
FAQ
To know what you've committed to. Many people discover concerning clauses only after something goes wrong. Understanding the terms helps you make informed decisions about how much data to trust the platform with.
Yes. Privacy policies are legal documents just like TOS. Upload them the same way and get the same structured analysis.
API terms and developer agreements are analyzed like any other contract. These often contain important clauses about rate limits, data usage, and liability that differ from the consumer TOS.
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