The terms you never read, read for you
Know what you're agreeing to
“I have read and agree to the Terms” is the biggest lie on the internet. Fineprinted reads the legal fine print of the services you use, flags the clauses that work against you, and tells you, in plain English, when the rules quietly change. Note: This is a fully automated AI analysis. AI can make mistakes.
- 6
- services graded
- 263
- clauses flagged
- 58
- changes caught
1.1 OVERVIEW. This Agreement governs your use of the Service...
1.2 UNILATERAL CHANGES. We reserve the right, at our sole discretion, to modify or replace these Terms at any time without prior notice to the user...
1.3 TERMINATION. We may terminate or suspend access to our Service immediately...
Silent rule changes
The service can rewrite the terms at any time without telling you. Continued use means automatic agreement.
How it works
We watch the documents
Every tracked service's Terms of Service and Privacy Policy is collected, normalized, and compared against the last version, down to the individual clause.
AI reads the fine print
Changed clauses are classified against a strict taxonomy of user-hostile patterns: forced arbitration, data sales, silent rule changes, and explained in plain English.
Grades update automatically
Results publish as soon as analysis finishes. AI can make mistakes, that's why every flag links to the original clause text, and shaky low-confidence findings are left out of the grade.
Curious about the grading scale and clause taxonomy? Read how Fineprinted works →
Did you know?
Terms of service oddities
The digital agreements we sign in seconds are full of surprising details, massive reading requirements, and unusual disclosures.
Reading time debt
The average internet user would need to spend 76 working days every year just to read the policies and terms of the sites they visit.
Longer than Hamlet
Many terms of service take over 90 minutes to read, making them longer than Shakespearean plays, yet we agree in less than a second.
Souls claimed
In 2010, an online game retailer added a clause claiming ownership of users' immortal souls. Thousands agreed without reading.
Shadow tracking
Many modern services reserve the right to track your precise locations even while the app is closed, then share it with advertising networks.
Missing a service you use?
Tell us what to track. Requests are voted on by other users and the most-wanted services get analyzed first.
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