See how 277+ platforms handle arbitration, data collection, refunds, and 20 other clause types — side by side. Updated daily.
How platforms constrain your ability to sue, where disputes must be filed, and who pays when things go wrong.
Caps the maximum amount the platform can be held financially responsible for, often at a token amount regardless of actual harm.
Requires you to resolve disputes through private arbitration instead of in court, often waiving your right to join class action lawsuits.
Specifies which state or country's laws apply and where legal proceedings must take place, often in the platform's home jurisdiction.
Makes you financially responsible for defending the platform against lawsuits related to your use of the service.
What platforms collect about you, how they use it, who they share it with, and what rights you have to control it.
Outlines user rights to access, correct, delete, or export personal data, which vary significantly by jurisdiction.
Defines what personal information the platform gathers, from basic account details to device fingerprints, location, and behavioral data.
Identifies third parties that receive your data, from business partners and advertisers to government agencies and affiliated companies.
Specifies how long the platform keeps your data after you delete content or close your account.
Describes how the agreement authorizes internal use of user data, including for personalization, advertising, analytics, and AI model training.
How platforms charge you, process refunds, and split revenue when you earn money on the platform.
Defines pricing, subscription charges, transaction fees, and how pricing can change over time.
Governs when refunds are available, how chargebacks are handled, and penalties for disputed transactions.
For creators, sellers, and developers: how revenue is shared, when payouts occur, and what activities trigger demonetization.
How platforms can suspend, limit, or terminate your account — and how they can change the rules you agreed to.
Rules governing who can create an account, identity verification, and grounds for suspension or termination.
The agreement reserves broad rights for the platform to change, limit, or remove features, services, or access at its discretion. Applicable law may impose limits on how these terms are applied.
How and when the platform can modify these terms, and what notice (if any) users receive before changes take effect.
Describes what happens when platforms believe rules are violated: warnings, suspensions, bans, content removal, and appeal processes.
What you're allowed to post, say, and do on the platform, and how violations are handled.
Rules for what content can be posted, how moderation decisions are made, and the platform's legal shields for moderation choices.
Specific prohibited activities, from spam and harassment to scraping, reverse engineering, and commercial use.
How platforms govern developers using their APIs and how automated systems make decisions that affect you.
Disclosures about algorithmic systems that make or inform decisions affecting users, from content ranking to account enforcement.
Limits on how third-party developers can integrate with the platform, including rate limits, data use, and grounds for API access revocation.
Don't manually check 277+ platforms.
Get alerts when the clauses that matter to you change — arbitration, data sharing, AI training, and more.
ConductAtlas classifies every provision by type (arbitration, data sharing, content licensing, etc.) and severity. This allows direct comparison of how different platforms handle the same legal concept.
ConductAtlas monitors 320+ platforms including social media, fintech, AI tools, e-commerce, health, gaming, and enterprise software. Every platform's terms and privacy policies are captured daily.
Yes. Select a provision type above to see every platform that has that clause, ranked by severity. Professional subscribers get full cross-platform analysis with regulatory mapping.