TERMS & CONDITIONS
All of the efforts you put into writing Terms & Conditions will be lost unless the user accepts them. Many apps and websites make consumers accept the agreement at signup or login.
Unless you don’t accumulate any personal information, you’ll likely have to draft a separate Privacy Policy.
Generally, you want it transparent to your users that you will not be responsible for damages arising from the use of your service. You’ll also like to inform users that their use of your app or website may come with risk, even if that possibility is slight.
If your service (app or website) is specific, with a great chance that users may misinterpret your intentions, specific disclaimers are also helpful.
Utilizing your intellectual property without permission or a license is a violation and is actionable under law. If a consumer does this, you want the ability to pursue an infringement claim and terminate that user’s access to the services you provide. The intellectual property section in Terms & Conditions takes care of this situation.
If you entertain advertisements from third parties, you should disclose those relationships even if you are not paid for them.
Subscription services (like SaaS apps) must incorporate payment terms in their Terms & Conditions. This enables you to terminate service for non-payment and puts customers on notice that you need payment information. These terms also indicate the frequency of payment and whether you offer monthly, quarterly or annual payment plans.
The termination clause contains your capacity to administer the Terms & Conditions. It may stand on its own or state violations that occur in termination. Complete your Terms & Conditions with an invitation for users to contact you if they require simplification of the conditions you have in your agreement.