May 6, 2026
Updated contact email addresses for legal opt-outs and support inquiries; no substantive policy changes.
Why it matters: If you need to opt out of something or contact Gusto with questions about your agreement, you need to use the correct email addresses. The updated terms now provide new contact addresses for these administrative functions.
Removed English from Privacy Statement language availability header
Why it matters: This change has minimal practical significance. English-speaking users can still access DocuSign's Privacy Statement in English; only the language list header was reformatted. No privacy rights, data practices, or protections were modified.
Technical page rebuild detected; no policy content changes identified.
Why it matters: This change does not materially affect privacy rights or data handling practices. The technical rebuild indicates the policy page remains active and accessible, but no substantive policy modifications were detected.
Clarified cookie and tracking consent model: non-essential cookies default to accepted unless user actively declines; strictly necessary cookies cannot be disabled.
Why it matters: The updated privacy notice establishes that users must actively decline optional tracking and data sharing; inaction is now treated as affirmative consent. This reverses the prior framing, in which users had discretion to allow or disallow cookies, and may affect how users' browsing data is collected and shared. The policy's explicit disclosure of data sharing with advertising and analytics partners and its statement that Strictly Necessary Cookies cannot be disabled reflect a more restrictive operational model on user control, even as transparency about third-party recipients is improved.
Added summary of recent changes section to privacy policy with April 30, 2026 effective date.
Why it matters: The updated policy now provides immediate notice that changes are being made, improving transparency about policy revisions. The substantive changes themselves are not detailed in the provided excerpt, but the addition of a change summary section creates a structural precedent for future policy disclosures. The effective date of April 30, 2026 establishes when modifications take effect.
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Removed disclaimers about translation status and English document primacy from Terms of Use
Why it matters: The updated Terms of Use no longer explicitly state the status of translations or identify the English version as controlling in case of conflict. Users in non-English jurisdictions, particularly those in EU, UK, or Asia-Pacific regions, can no longer rely on contractual language confirming that translations were officially provided or clarifying which version applies if language versions diverge. This removal may increase legal ambiguity in jurisdictions that mandate clear disclosure of translation status for enforceability of consumer contracts.
Reformatted User Agreement to include detailed table of contents; no substantive policy changes detected
Why it matters: The updated agreement now includes a structured table of contents that improves accessibility and navigation of PayPal's full policy terms. This is a usability enhancement rather than a substantive modification of user rights or obligations.
Updated version numbers and effective dates across EU/UK Terms of Service documents and updated company director information.
Why it matters: This change signals that Whatnot has released updated versions of its EU/UK Terms of Service, so users should be aware of the new effective date (May 6, 2026) if they need to reference which version applies to their use. The director change is relevant for corporate governance transparency but does not affect user rights or obligations.
Updated version numbers and effective dates across EU/UK Terms of Service language versions; replaced director in company registration details.
Why it matters: While this change is primarily administrative, the reissuance of the terms indicates a formal update to the governing contract. EU and UK users should be aware that the effective date of their Terms of Service is now May 6, 2026, and should review the full updated terms if they wish to understand any substantive changes beyond the administrative updates shown here.
Relocates legal entity to Singapore; requires explicit 'I Accept' button for agreement acceptance; adds disclosure section for AI-powered support tools
Why it matters: The relocation to Singapore incorporation and clarified acceptance procedures affect which laws govern your rights and how disputes are resolved, and the new AI tools disclosure signals Supabase's use of AI in customer interactions. Organizations handling regulated personal data should verify that their vendor agreements and data processing frameworks remain compliant.
Updated promotional content and quick links in privacy policy navigation; no apparent changes to privacy terms or data handling practices.
Why it matters: While this change is limited to promotional content, monitoring privacy policy modifications remains important to track how companies disclose their practices. Even non-substantive changes are part of the official privacy record and should be documented.
Updated featured content links and announcements within Terms of Service navigation sections.
Why it matters: While this change updates featured content and navigation links, it does not modify the substantive terms, conditions, or obligations governing user rights or service delivery. Users do not need to take action based on this update.
Updated button label in privacy policy header from 'Sign up free' to 'Get started free'.
Why it matters: This change does not materially affect privacy rights or data handling. The privacy policy substance, effective date, and user protections remain identical; only the navigational button text changed.
Updated button text from 'Sign up free' to 'Get started free' in navigation area.
Why it matters: This change does not materially affect users. The revision updates only the text of a navigation button and leaves all legal rights, obligations, and protections in the Terms of Service unchanged.
Corrected typo in Terms footer: 'Applicant Privacy POlicy' changed to 'Applicant Privacy Policy'.
Why it matters: This change has no operational significance. The correction is purely editorial and does not alter the substance of Mistral's terms, consumer rights, obligations, or service conditions.
Corrected spelling error in Usage Policy document header; no substantive policy changes.
Why it matters: This change does not materially affect any user rights, obligations, or terms of service. It is a technical correction that improves document accuracy without altering policy substance.
Corrects typo in Terms of Service document navigation (Applicant Privacy POlicy to Policy).
Why it matters: This change does not affect substantive terms or consumer rights; it is a documentation correction only.
Fixed typo in privacy policy header navigation; no substantive policy changes.
Why it matters: This change does not affect privacy rights or data practices. It is a technical correction only.
Adds Notebooks data handling disclosure to privacy notice, clarifying chat retention and AI training exclusions.
Why it matters: The updated language formally establishes the data handling boundaries for the new Notebooks feature, clarifying that retention follows existing user settings rather than introducing new data collection practices. The explicit exclusion of source files from AI model training sets a meaningful limit on how user-provided materials may be processed, which distinguishes Notebooks from other generative AI features that may use inputs for training.
Updated customer support phone number in privacy policy.
Why it matters: This change does not affect your privacy rights or data practices. It is a contact information update only.
Minor editorial updates to sponsorship and content elements in privacy policy; no material changes to data practices.
Why it matters: Because this update does not change Target's data collection, use, or sharing practices, it does not materially affect consumer privacy rights or protections. Consumers can rely on the underlying privacy commitments stated in the policy without needing to adjust their expectations based on this revision.
Adds promotional shopping links to Terms and Conditions page layout; no substantive policy changes to terms governing customer rights or obligations.
Why it matters: This change does not meaningfully affect customer rights or obligations. It is a presentation update that adds seasonal shopping links to the terms page without modifying the binding terms themselves.
Removed explicit AI training and data use disclosures from Terms of Use; unclear if actual practices changed.
Why it matters: Removing disclosure language from terms of service reduces the transparency of data practices. The previous terms explicitly stated that AI interactions would be used for model training. The updated terms do not address this topic.
Adds Ollie mobile app exclusion and directs users to separate privacy notice for that application.
Why it matters: This change clarifies which privacy policy applies to which Coursera product. Ollie App users now know they must consult a separate privacy notice, preventing confusion about data handling and ensuring they access the correct policy for the service they are using.
Minor numerical adjustment detected in OpenSea privacy policy header; no substantive privacy or data handling changes.
Why it matters: This change does not materially affect user rights or protections. The detected modification appears to be a minor formatting or reference update with no substantive impact on OpenSea's privacy commitments or data handling practices.
Display element updated in Terms of Service header; no substantive policy change detected.
Why it matters: The detected change appears to be a formatting or display update rather than a substantive modification to OpenSea's terms. No material impact on user rights or platform obligations has been identified.
Updated helpfulness feedback metric from 265/316 to 270/322 on privacy policy.
Why it matters: This change does not materially matter to users. It is a routine update to aggregate user feedback on the helpfulness of the privacy policy itself and does not alter any privacy rights, data practices, or terms of service.
Reorganized help article navigation to list CCPA data rights article more prominently.
Why it matters: This change makes TaskRabbit's CCPA data rights information more accessible by moving it to a more prominent position in the documentation. California residents and users worldwide can now find information about requesting or deleting their personal data more easily.
Updated website navigation structure and footer links on Privacy Notice for Drivers and Delivery People; substantive policy language unchanged.
Why it matters: This change has no operational significance with respect to privacy rights, data handling, or legal obligations. The restructured navigation may improve discoverability of company information and resources, but the substantive terms under which drivers and delivery people use Uber remain unchanged.
Removed 'Home' text from Privacy Policy header; no substantive privacy practice changes.
Why it matters: This change has minimal material significance. It is a formatting adjustment that does not alter privacy practices, user rights, or data handling disclosures.
Updated daily. New changes added as detected.