Blog - Page 101

Legal articles in easy to understand language.

How to Write an EULA for Your Software

An EULA, or End User License Agreement, is an important legal agreement that works to grant a limited license to use your app, as well as maintain your own rights and limit your own obligations. Users must accept your terms before installing or using your app and are thus limited...

Legal Pages

Businesses may need to employ various types of legal pages on their websites or mobile apps. Some, like Privacy Policies, are required by law, while others, such as a Terms and Conditions agreement (T&C), are not. Regardless of legal demands, you may find that your company needs one or more...

5 Clauses Ecommerce Stores Need on Terms Legal Pages

Terms and Conditions for e-commerce stores (also known as Terms of Use or Terms of Service) are regularly used to cover off a wide range of issues, but it's crucial to make sure you cover the clauses you add in that agreement that will protect your business. To do this, here...

What to Pick in SaaS: EULA, SLA or ToS

Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) is becoming more widely used and service-based offerings are becoming the new normal for vendors. But the legal agreements involved for new businesses operating SaaS apps are still confusing for many people. Should you use a Terms of Service (ToS) when you sign up new users? What about an...

Privacy Policies vs. Terms & Conditions

The main difference here is that a Privacy Policy is required by law if you collect or use any personal information from your users, e.g. email addresses, first and last names etc. while a Terms & Conditions agreement sets forth terms, conditions, requirements, and clauses relating to the use of...

Your Checkout Page Is Missing Clickwrap

You may not have heard of clickwrap, but it's one of the most important ways you can use to ensure that you're legally protected when a customer purchases something from your store. It doesn't matter if you sell physical items or digital items. Clickwrap is a .way of getting consent from...