May 9, 2026
Updated promotional headlines within terms of service; no substantive policy changes detected.
Why it matters: This change does not materially affect users; it updates promotional content within the terms of service document but does not modify service terms, user rights, or data practices.
Added Amazon Bedrock AgentCore Payments service with explicit disclaimers that AWS is not a financial services provider, holds no funds, and developers bear sole responsibility for compliance and tran
Why it matters: The updated terms establish a new payment-routing service feature with clear boundaries on AWS liability and responsibility. By explicitly disclaiming regulated financial services status and fund custody, AWS is signaling the operational model for this feature: developers retain full liability for regulatory compliance, transaction security, and customer disputes. Organizations evaluating or integrating AgentCore Payments need to understand these liability assignments and ensure their own compliance frameworks and customer disclosures align with AWS's stated limitations.
Removed promotional language about Fitbit health coach and fitness tracking features from Terms of Service.
Why it matters: This change removes marketing language but does not alter the binding terms that govern your use of Google Nest services. Your rights, obligations, and the company's data practices remain unchanged by this update.
Website navigation menu restructured; no policy or privacy practice changes detected.
Why it matters: This change does not materially affect privacy practices or consumer rights. It is a website structure reorganization only and has no bearing on how Samsung collects, uses, or protects user data.
Updated product navigation in Privacy Policy: added BYOC Log Management, removed CloudPrem references.
Why it matters: While this change has no material impact on privacy rights or data handling practices, it reflects product portfolio updates. Organizations evaluating Datadog's deployment options should note that 'CloudPrem' has been replaced or reorganized in the product navigation, and new options like 'BYOC Log Management' are now highlighted.
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Product navigation updated: CloudPrem replaced with BYOC Log Management in website menus
Why it matters: This change does not materially affect terms of service or user obligations. It is a product naming and menu organization update visible on Datadog's public website. Users and compliance teams need not take action, as no new rights, requirements, or restrictions are established.
Renumbered internal section references in warranty disclaimers and liability caps; substantive terms unchanged.
Why it matters: While this change is technical rather than substantive, accurate section references in a terms document are important for clarity and enforceability. Users and legal teams reviewing specific protections should note the new section numbers to avoid confusion.
Promotional event reference changed from live to on-demand session in document header.
Why it matters: This change does not affect substantive terms or user obligations. It is a promotional notice update changing event format from live to on-demand, embedded in the document header rather than within binding contractual language.
Updated promotional messaging in privacy policy header from live event to on-demand session
Why it matters: This change does not materially affect Tabnine's privacy policy. The update is limited to promotional messaging in the document header and does not alter data collection, processing, retention, or consumer protections.
Reorganized product categorization and marketing descriptions in Google Maps Platform terms; no consumer rights or service obligations modified.
Why it matters: Businesses and developers who use Google Maps Platform need to confirm their current product subscriptions map correctly to the reorganized product portfolio and verify that renamed offerings still meet their technical and business requirements.
Updated contact phone number in Privacy Policy footer; no substantive policy changes.
Why it matters: This change does not materially affect consumer rights or privacy protections. It is a contact routing update that may improve customers' ability to reach ADP sales or support services, but it does not alter any substantive privacy policies or data handling practices.
Updated contact email addresses and added two new service terms to agreement index; no substantive rights changes.
Why it matters: For users who wish to opt out of arbitration, the updated email address (legal-opt-outs@gusto.com) ensures opt-out requests reach the correct internal department. The addition of new service terms reflects Gusto's expansion of optional HR and compliance tools, though these are separate from the core Terms of Service and apply only if elected by users.
Removed Mexico from global arbitration venues; established Mexico-specific dispute resolution requiring 30-day negotiation, then CAM arbitration; excluded Mexican consumer protection law applicability
Why it matters: The updated terms establish a different dispute resolution pathway for Mexico-based customers, requiring negotiation before arbitration and explicitly excluding Mexican consumer protection law. This change affects how commercial disputes are resolved and creates potential enforceability uncertainty around the consumer protection law carve-out. Organizations operating in Mexico should understand these revised procedures and evaluate whether the carve-out aligns with their legal status and compliance obligations.
Terms of Service document replaced with security verification page; substantive contractual terms no longer publicly accessible in standard format.
Why it matters: The Terms and Conditions are the binding legal agreement that establishes your rights and obligations when using Booking.com, including what you can do if a booking goes wrong, how your data is used, and how disputes are resolved. Without access to these terms, you cannot understand your protections or exercise your rights.
Price display value updated in Privacy Policy header; no substantive privacy term changes detected.
Why it matters: This change does not materially affect privacy practices or user rights. It is a cosmetic update to a display element within the policy document.
Modified one sentence in terms document; context of specific change not visible in diff provided.
Why it matters: Without visibility into what the modified sentence addresses, the significance of this change cannot be established. The numeric change alone does not clarify whether user rights, obligations, or costs have been affected.
Technical metadata update to privacy policy; no substantive privacy term changes detected.
Why it matters: This change appears to be a technical update with no visible impact on Patreon's actual privacy practices or consumer rights. However, low confidence in this assessment is warranted because the provided diff excerpt does not display the actual policy sentences that were modified; if substantive privacy language was changed, that would require separate analysis.
Updated helpfulness feedback metrics on privacy policy document from 270/322 to 294/350 responses.
Why it matters: This change has no material impact. It updates only the feedback metrics displayed on the privacy policy page itself, not the policy content or terms.
Updated customer satisfaction metrics in Terms of Service documentation
Why it matters: This change does not materially affect your use of TaskRabbit or your rights under the service. It is a routine update to how TaskRabbit reports customer satisfaction data in their help documentation.
Restructured Terms of Service with new section organization and 367 sentences added.
Why it matters: When a company restructures its entire terms document rather than making targeted edits, it can bury meaningful changes inside a reorganization. The addition of AI services language and updated arbitration terms may affect how Instacart uses your order data and how you can dispute charges.
Reorganized website navigation and footer links in Privacy Notice; no substantive privacy policy changes detected.
Why it matters: The substantive privacy notice remains unchanged; users' rights, data collection practices, and privacy protections are unaffected by this restructuring. This is a website navigation change with no operational impact on how Uber handles personal data or what privacy commitments apply to users.
Removed repetitive corporate entity listings and organizational boilerplate throughout Terms of Use; improves readability without substantive policy changes.
Why it matters: This change makes Roblox's Terms of Use clearer and more concise by removing repetitive legal text, but it does not alter the substantive rights, obligations, or policies that govern user conduct on the platform.
Updated Privacy Statement footer with company location and additional resource links; core policy language unchanged.
Why it matters: This change is administrative in nature. The updated footer provides additional points of contact and navigation to PayPal's privacy and legal resources, but introduces no modifications to how PayPal collects, uses, or protects consumer data.
Clarified automatic payment authorization process to specify partial charging of preferred method followed by backup method for remaining balance; added automatic currency conversion to cover shortfal
Why it matters: The updated terms establish a clearer sequence for how PayPal processes automatic payments when your preferred payment method has insufficient funds, reducing ambiguity about which payment method will be charged and when. The added automatic currency conversion authorization expands PayPal's operational flexibility to draw on multiple currency balances to complete transactions, which may affect users with multi-currency accounts.
Added Persian language option to Privacy Policy document header.
Why it matters: The addition of Persian language support expands accessibility of the Privacy Policy to Persian-speaking users, but does not alter any substantive privacy terms, data collection practices, or consumer rights. The underlying policy remains unchanged.
May 7, 2026
Removed duplicate marketing language and consolidated navigation links from Nest Renew product descriptions.
Why it matters: This change has no material impact on your rights or obligations. It is a formatting cleanup that makes the Terms of Service more concise by removing duplicate product marketing language.
Updated customer service phone number in privacy policy header
Why it matters: While this change has no impact on privacy practices themselves, it ensures that customers looking to contact ADP about privacy concerns can reach the correct department. An outdated contact number could prevent legitimate privacy inquiries from reaching the right team.
Updated arbitration clause to clarify awards have no effect on Walmart's disputes with other parties; expanded fee-shifting grounds.
Why it matters: The updated terms establish that arbitration awards you obtain against Walmart will not restrict or affect any disputes Walmart pursues against other parties, clarifying the individual and non-precedential nature of arbitration outcomes. This refinement affects how arbitration awards are interpreted and applied if Walmart faces related claims from other customers or parties.
Updated security nonce values in privacy statement page infrastructure; no change to privacy rights or data handling practices.
Why it matters: Although this change appears significant on a technical level, it has no practical impact on your privacy rights or Booking.com's data handling practices, as it only refreshes security tokens used to protect the page itself rather than modifying any privacy commitments.
Restructures Terms to require consent to three interdependent documents and adds dispute resolution reference.
Why it matters: Booking.com's decision to consolidate its contractual terms across three separate documents means you are now accepting obligations, data processing terms, and content rules defined in three places rather than one. This makes the full scope of your agreement less transparent and harder to review before you book, and it complicates the process of understanding what rights you have if something goes wrong with a reservation.
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Updated daily. New changes added as detected.