Blog: Terms & Conditions
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Terms & Conditions for User-Generated Content
Terms & Conditions are vital for any web page or mobile app, but when you encourage user-generated content, the importance of this agreement intensifies. Here is what you must consider when drafting Terms & Conditions for a website or an app that has user-generated content. Why Terms & Conditions The Terms & Conditions...
Terms & Conditions for Objectionable Content
Objectionable content is content that most users would find to be offensive, upsetting, or inappropriate. Some examples of objectionable content include: Defamatory commentary and hate speech about religion, gender, race and other targeted groups, Overly sexual material of an explicit nature, Portrayals of extreme violence or content that encourages violence, Bullying...
How to Write Terms & Conditions
The Terms & Conditions (T&C) are also known as Terms of Service or Terms of Use. This article and outline will help you draft and write a basic yet complete Terms & Conditions for your app or website. The Terms & Conditions act as a contract between you and your users so...
Terms & Conditions for Individuals
Terms & Conditions (T&C) are also referred to as Terms of Service and Terms of Use. This document is a contract between you and your users so you can assure appropriate use of your app and website. While you may be distributing an app or website as an individual developer rather...
Terms & Conditions for Games
Like any other website or mobile app, games also require a Terms & Conditions (T&C) agreement. Differences between Terms & Conditions for games and Terms & Conditions for other types of apps are subtle. However, that does not eliminate the need for a T&C and you should not distribute your games...
Intellectual Property in your Terms & Conditions
There are legal methods for registering your intellectual property so you can enforce your rights in court, but you also need a way to enforce your interests in a less formal and more immediate manner. You can do that with intellectual property protection provisions in your Terms & Conditions (T&C) agreement. What...