Compare indemnification governance provisions between OpenAI and Google-Gemini. Provisions are extracted from monitored governance documents and classified by severity.
This indemnification clause allocates risk by establishing that users bear financial and legal responsibility for defending OpenAI against third-party claims connected to user conduct or user-created content. The provision applies broadly to claims arising from Terms violations, service misuse, or third-party intellectual property or rights violations.
Consumer impact
Users assume an obligation to cover OpenAI's legal costs, settlement amounts, and damages related to third-party claims involving the user's actions, content, or outputs generated through the Services. This obligation extends to claims involving products or services users develop using OpenAI's Services and claims by third parties alleging rights violations.
Opt-out available
No opt-out available
Actual clause text
You will defend, indemnify, and hold harmless OpenAI and our affiliates, and our and their respective officers, directors, employees, agents, successors, and assigns from and against any claims, liabilities, damages, judgments, awards, losses, costs, expenses, and fees (including reasonable attorneys' fees) arising out of or relating to your violation of these Terms or your use of the Services, including your Input, any products or services you develop using the Services, or your violation of any third party's rights.
AI-extracted from source document. Verify against original for legal use.
No Indemnification clause found in our archive for this platform.
AI Difference AnalysisProfessional
Stripe's arbitration clause is narrower than Amazon's in one key respect: it includes a small claims court carve-out that Amazon's clause does not. PayPal's clause is the most aggressive of the three, explicitly waiving jury trial rights in addition to class action rights. From a compliance perspective, Amazon presents the lowest risk for B2B contracts while PayPal creates the highest exposure for consumer-facing applications subject to CFPB oversight.