This analysis describes what Google's agreement states, permits, or reserves. It does not constitute a legal determination about enforceability. Regulatory applicability and practical outcomes may vary by jurisdiction, enforcement context, and individual circumstances. Read our methodology
Users cannot recover the most commonly significant categories of loss from Google, regardless of the nature or severity of harm suffered.
Interpretive note: The excerpt does not include any qualifying language such as 'to the extent permitted by applicable law,' which is commonly present in such clauses and may apply. The excerpt may be a partial quotation. If such a qualifier exists elsewhere, the scope of the exclusion could be narrower.
The updated terms establish that Google provides its services 'as is' without any express or implied warranties, replacing the prior commitment to provide services 'using reasonable skill and care.' This means users cannot rely on contractual warranty protections if services fail or perform poorly. Additionally, the revised language removes the requirement that Google hold a 'reasonable belief' before removing user content; the terms now permit removal if content 'could harm' Google, users, or third parties. The terms also restructure liability limitations, removing prior carve-outs for fraud and negligence while establishing a $200 minimum liability floor, which may limit recovery for damages in certain circumstances.
View change record →The updated terms establish that Google will provide its services 'using reasonable skill and care,' a warranty that did not appear in prior language. Under the revised terms, if Google does not meet this quality standard, users are required to notify Google and the parties will attempt to resolve the issue through direct communication. Liability caps increased from $200 to US$500 or 125% of fees paid in the prior 12 months, whichever is greater. The updated terms also add a 'reasonable belief' standard before Google removes user content, requiring Google to reasonably believe content breaches terms, violates law, or could cause harm before removal, except where doing so would cause harm, violate law, or compromise investigations or service integrity.
View change record →The updated terms eliminate Google's warranty that services are provided with 'reasonable skill and care' and instead state that services are provided 'as is' without express or implied warranties. Liability is capped at the greater of $200 or fees paid in the preceding 12 months, and Google is no longer liable for losses arising from negligence or fraud. The terms also remove the requirement that Google 'reasonably believe' a violation occurred before removing user content, shifting from a belief-based standard to a direct assertion-based standard. These changes substantially limit the legal remedies available to users in case of service failures, data loss, or content removal disputes.
View change record →You cannot hold Google financially responsible for lost profits, revenues, business opportunities, goodwill, anticipated savings, indirect or consequential losses, or punitive damages.
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"Google isn't liable for: loss of profits, revenues, business opportunities, goodwill, or anticipated savings indirect or consequential losses punitive damages— Excerpt from Google's Google Terms of Service
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Users cannot recover the most commonly significant categories of loss from Google, regardless of the nature or severity of harm suffered.
You cannot hold Google financially responsible for lost profits, revenues, business opportunities, goodwill, anticipated savings, indirect or consequential losses, or punitive damages.
ConductAtlas has identified this type of provision across 289 platforms. See the full comparison.
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