Blog - Page 31

Legal articles in easy to understand language.

Privacy Policy for Subscription Plans

Ecommerce and SaaS embrace the subscription plan as a way to make their products accessible to users. But the need for billing, shipping, and personal information to customize the experience makes these services more intrusive than others offered online. If you wish to offer a subscription plan, your Privacy Policy must...

YouTube Disclaimers and How to Draft Them

While disclaimers are common on websites and blogs, they tend to be used less regularly with videos. However, not using disclaimers on videos can cause legal problems. This is because people take videos just as seriously or even more seriously than they take articles and blog posts. Any exchange of information...

"As Is" and "As Available" in Online Agreements

"As Is" and "As Available" are contract traditions that eventually extended into the sale of digital products. While they are not required contract language, they act as clarifying statements because consumers are accustomed to them. Not every website or app developers include these clauses, but they are helpful in emphasizing your...

Disclaimers for Ecommerce Stores

Like any other website or app, ecommerce stores carry risks. Consumers may decide to place more reliance on your product than appropriate or attempt to hold you liable for material from links provided on your website. That is where Disclaimers offer you additional legal protection. Disclaimers are statements that serve as warnings...

GDPR Compliance Plan

The GDPR is currently one of the strictest privacy laws in the world, with a global reach. Here's everything you need to understand the effects of the regulation and get your GDPR compliance plan started. What's the GDPR? The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) is the EU's new legal framework for protecting personal...

Privacy Policy for User Comments

It is easy to overlook user comments when it comes to privacy practices. Since users often post comments through third party platforms (like Facebook) and submit the information voluntarily, there are few developers who realize privacy protection laws apply to these exchanges. The laws protecting privacy generally apply to any entity...