343 Entities monitored
811 Documents tracked
1617 Changes detected
Showing all changes — Show significant changes only
May 12, 2026
WhatsApp
WhatsApp Terms of Service
high
Meta offered rival AI chatbots one month of free access to WhatsApp while negotiating with EU regulators. This follows an outright ban on third-party AI chatbots in January, a paid-access reversal in March, and now free temporary access under Digital Markets Act enforcement pressure.
Why it matters: This is a direct example of regulatory enforcement changing platform governance in real time. The Digital Markets Act is forcing Meta to reverse its own platform policies. For WhatsApp users, this determines whether you can choose which AI assistant you use within the app or are locked into Meta AI. The outcome of EU negotiations will set precedent for whether dominant platforms can restrict AI competition on messaging services used by over 2 billion people.
May 11, 2026
Anyscale
Anyscale Terms of Service
low
Minor punctuation correction in Terms of Service footer; no substantive policy changes.
Why it matters: This change has no operational significance. A single period was added to a 404 error message at the end of the Terms of Service document, creating no change to substantive terms, obligations, rights, or procedures.
AWS Bedrock
AWS Service Terms
medium
Adds Claude Platform on AWS with data processing by Anthropic outside AWS infrastructure; new section 50.16 establishes terms including cross-border data transfer to Anthropic.
Why it matters: The updated terms establish a new service model where content provided to Claude Platform is processed outside AWS by Anthropic, a separate entity. This creates a multi-party data flow that organizations must account for in their vendor management, privacy notices, and data processing agreements. For organizations serving customers, this change may require disclosure updates and subprocessor authorization confirmation.
Runway
Runway Terms of Service
low
Adds digital avatars (Stock and Custom) to Services definition; clarifies Custom Avatars are user content; expands liability exemptions to cover intentional misconduct and gross negligence.
Why it matters: The updated terms establish that avatars are now explicitly part of Runway's Services offering, with clear ownership rules (Custom Avatars belong to users; Stock Avatars belong to Runway). This reduces ambiguity about avatar content ownership and licensing rights. The expansion of liability carve-outs to include intentional misconduct and gross negligence clarifies that claims meeting these standards are not subject to the liability cap, which may be operationally significant in disputes involving serious corporate misconduct.
Runway
Runway Privacy Policy
low
Expands user content definition to include prompts, audio, screen sharing, and transcripts; adds privacy rights protections for Japan and three additional US states.
Why it matters: The clarified content definition ensures users understand that Runway's policy covers a comprehensive range of inputs and outputs including prompts and generated transcripts, which may be material for users concerned about how their interactions with the service are documented. The expansion to recognize privacy rights for Japan and three additional US states operationally requires Runway to honor data access, deletion, and correction requests from residents of those regions under the same procedures already established for other jurisdictions.
OpenSea
OpenSea Privacy Policy
low
OpenSea privacy policy revised with single sentence modification on May 11, 2026.
Why it matters: A privacy policy modification on a major NFT marketplace affects how user data is collected, processed, and disclosed. Without the specific text of the modified sentence, the operational significance cannot be determined, but any change to privacy terms warrants verification against applicable data protection frameworks.

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OpenSea
OpenSea Terms of Service
low
Platform pricing information updated on May 11, 2026; no material change to service terms detected.
Why it matters: This change reflects a minor pricing data update within the document context rather than a substantive modification to the Terms of Service itself. No material operational implications for consumer rights, obligations, or platform governance are indicated.
Shopify
Shopify Terms of Service
low
Adds WhatsApp messaging authorization and Agentic Storefronts service with supplemental terms governing its use.
Why it matters: The updated terms establish new communication pathways and introduce a new service category with explicit governance. Merchants and Shopify users should understand that WhatsApp is now a formal communications channel for service-related messages if they have opted in, and that any use of Agentic Storefronts carries separate contractual obligations under supplemental terms.
Minecraft
Minecraft Usage Guidelines
low
Navigation label updated from 'Buy' to 'Buy Now' for Minecoins in Minecraft Usage Guidelines.
Why it matters: This change has no operational significance. It is a navigation menu label revision that does not modify any underlying platform policies, user rights, or obligations.
Google Play Store
Google Play Terms
low
Converted Terms of Service language from Vietnamese to English; clarified device compatibility and terms hierarchy.
Why it matters: The updated Terms of Service establish a consolidated English-language policy document that clarifies the relationship between Google Play-specific terms and broader Google Terms of Service. The revised language makes explicit which terms control in case of conflict and restates device compatibility requirements with greater clarity, though the underlying consumer obligations and platform governance remain substantively consistent with the prior version.
Anyscale
Anyscale Terms of Service
low
Modified cookie and third-party tracking disclosures; added Stripe payment and GitHub authentication tracking; removed prior Google Analytics references.
Why it matters: The updated terms modify which third-party services are documented as having access to user activity data. Removing Google Analytics disclosure while adding Stripe and GitHub tracking establishes a different vendor profile for data sharing. Users who made privacy decisions based on prior vendor disclosures should review the updated list, and organizations using Anyscale need to update vendor authorization records and privacy notice language to reflect the new disclosed services.
Zendesk
Zendesk Privacy Policy
low
Updated company description to AI-first platform and clarified data use for intelligent resolutions.
Why it matters: The updated policy clarifies that Zendesk uses personal data to power AI-driven intelligent resolutions, making explicit a material operational practice previously described in less specific terms. This gives users and organizations a clearer understanding of how their data is processed, though it does not expand collection or processing authority beyond what was previously stated.
Best Buy
Best Buy Privacy Policy
low
Adds expanded privacy hub with fraud prevention guides, account security resources, and navigation structure for privacy controls.
Why it matters: The updated page establishes a more structured approach to privacy disclosure and customer education. Best Buy now explicitly provides navigation to privacy controls, fraud-prevention resources, and account-security guidance within its privacy policy hub. This change affects how customers discover and understand their privacy options and protections available through Best Buy's platforms.
Runway
Runway Usage Policy
low
Added table of contents listing content restrictions to Usage Policy, including children's safety, violence, explicit content, hateful conduct, and misleading material.
Why it matters: The updated policy improves transparency by making content restrictions more discoverable and organized. Users can now quickly locate which content categories the platform restricts, reducing ambiguity about what is prohibited.
Chime
Chime Privacy Policy
medium
Removed granular data sharing disclosures; replaced with single login-based Privacy Settings update instruction.
Why it matters: The revised policy removes explicit, line-by-line disclosure of data sharing practices for key business purposes. Under the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, financial institutions must affirmatively disclose whether they share nonpublic personal information with nonaffiliated third parties and must provide consumers with the ability to opt out. Replacing itemized disclosures with a generic instruction to update account settings may not satisfy that statutory requirement, potentially exposing Chime to regulatory challenge or enforcement action by federal banking regulators or the FTC.
Amazon
Amazon Conditions of Use
low
Reorganized product categories and service links in footer navigation; no substantive policy changes.
Why it matters: This change does not materially affect consumer rights, obligations, or platform operations. It is a formatting and organizational update to the document's navigation structure.
PayPal
PayPal Privacy Statement
low
Added table of contents to privacy policy listing 24 sections including AI decision-making and regional privacy disclosures.
Why it matters: This change improves policy organization and discoverability by adding a table of contents that displays all 24 privacy policy sections upfront. The substantive privacy terms and user rights remain unchanged; the operational significance is limited to how users navigate and locate specific policy sections.
PayPal
PayPal User Agreement
low
Adds table of contents navigation to User Agreement; no substantive policy changes.
Why it matters: This change improves document accessibility by adding a comprehensive navigation menu, making it easier for users to locate specific topics within the agreement. However, no substantive changes to PayPal's policies, fees, protections, or user rights have been made.
Uniswap
Uniswap Privacy Policy
low
Updated privacy policy metadata timestamp; no substantive privacy practice changes detected.
Why it matters: This change does not establish new practices, modify existing protections, or alter user obligations. The privacy policy terms themselves remain unchanged; only the metadata timestamp indicating when the policy was last reviewed has been updated.
Nextdoor
Nextdoor Privacy Policy
low
Reorganized footer navigation links in privacy policy; no substantive policy changes.
Why it matters: This change does not affect policy substance or operational significance. It is a formatting adjustment to navigation structure with no impact on how privacy rights, data handling, or consumer protections are defined or implemented.
Shein
Shein Terms and Conditions
low
Minor interface updates to website navigation, cart messaging, and verification prompts detected; no material changes to contractual obligations or data practices.
Why it matters: The updated Terms and Conditions reflect minor user interface refinements that improve the account recovery experience by explicitly notifying users that their shopping cart items are saved. These changes do not materially alter the underlying contractual relationship or consumer obligations.
Target
Target Privacy Policy
low
Adds timestamp and navigation to privacy policy homepage, directing users to data collection, state-specific privacy, and retention sections.
Why it matters: The updated homepage provides clearer visibility into when the policy was last substantively updated and directs users to specific sections covering data collection, state-specific rights, and retention practices. This improves navigation and transparency without changing the substantive privacy terms themselves.
Target
Target Terms and Conditions
low
Added navigation links to privacy policies for Target Circle Card, CVS, MinuteClinic, and Wi-Fi services in Terms and Conditions.
Why it matters: The updated Terms and Conditions now provide direct navigation to privacy policies for Target's related services, improving user access to privacy disclosures without modifying substantive terms or obligations. This change enhances transparency architecture rather than altering contractual rights or data practices.
BeReal
BeReal Privacy Policy
low
Added explicit cookie use disclosure and consent mechanism in Privacy Policy footer
Why it matters: The updated Privacy Policy establishes explicit disclosure and a consent mechanism for analytics cookie use that was previously implicit. This clarification affects how BeReal's cookie practices are communicated to users and may support regulatory compliance under privacy frameworks that require affirmative disclosure of cookie use, though the sufficiency of continued-use-as-consent depends on applicable jurisdiction.
OpenSea
OpenSea Privacy Policy
low
Price display updated in OpenSea privacy policy page header; no material privacy or data handling changes detected.
Why it matters: The detected change appears to be a minor formatting or price display update with no operational significance to privacy terms, data collection, or user rights. The modification does not alter OpenSea's stated data practices or user protections.
OpenSea
OpenSea Terms of Service
low
Price figure adjusted in OpenSea Terms of Service document from $2,329.98 to $2,329.06.
Why it matters: The operational significance of this change depends entirely on what the modified price figure represents. If it relates to user fees, merchant costs, or platform thresholds, the adjustment may affect transaction costs or contractual terms. Without clarity on the figure's purpose, the material impact cannot be determined.
Canva
Canva Privacy Policy
low
Adds cookie consent banner with options to accept all or manage individual cookie preferences
Why it matters: The updated terms establish an explicit consent mechanism for non-essential cookies, moving from implicit to affirmative consent. This change aligns Canva's privacy policy presentation with GDPR and CCPA requirements for transparent cookie disclosure and user control, and signals that Canva is implementing granular preference management rather than relying on single accept-all mechanisms.
Canva
Canva Terms of Use
low
Added cookie consent notice requiring acceptance to enable non-essential cookies for personalization and advertising.
Why it matters: The updated Terms of Use now explicitly disclose cookie use and require consent for non-essential tracking cookies. This change reflects legal requirements in multiple jurisdictions requiring affirmative consent for non-essential cookies used in advertising and analytics. The addition of a 'Manage cookies' option suggests Canva is implementing granular consent controls rather than requiring blanket acceptance.
Coursera
Coursera Privacy Notice
low
Added 'Do Not Sell/Share' footer link to privacy notice navigation
Why it matters: The updated footer adds a more visible navigation path to a data sale opt-out mechanism, likely required under CCPA and similar state privacy laws. This change improves user-facing transparency regarding privacy rights, though it does not alter the underlying data processing practices disclosed in the full policy.
Coursera
Coursera Terms of Use
low
Added 'Do Not Sell/Share' footer link for state privacy law compliance
Why it matters: The addition of a 'Do Not Sell/Share' footer link establishes a visible, accessible mechanism for users to exercise data privacy rights under state consumer privacy statutes. This change reflects Coursera's procedural compliance with disclosure and opt-out requirements mandated by laws such as the CCPA and CPRA.

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