Recent changes
A chronological feed of substantive shifts in the legal documents we track. 215 changes so far.
Removed an advertising section describing how AWS shares limited data with advertising partners, and updated Japan controller address for privacy rights requests.
Updated the Prime Video/Amazon AU privacy notice, adding more details and shifting sections by emphasizing advertiser/identifier practices and limiting specific disclosure of certain account access rights.
Replaced the notice with an Amazon.com.au version and changed several details (entities covered, third-party sharing/advertising choices, and account access/correction rights), likely affecting how your data is handled.
Replaced the US-focused Terms of Use with a much longer Amazon.com.au version covering Australian law, detailed account/rights rules, and new/expanded conditions for electronic notices, liability, and service/notice procedures.
Amazon expanded its privacy notice to cover more U.S. disclosure and ad-choice links, added household settings and author account access, and clarified dispute resolution under Washington law.
Amazon’s terms shifted to U.S.-based terms, adding stronger liability waivers, Washington courts/law, and broader AI/agent restrictions and IP complaint procedures.
Amazon added U.S. privacy disclosures, expanded in-store and advertising data uses, and updated user rights and dispute terms.
Substack may now obtain extra data from third parties to enrich profiles, improve analytics, and deliver safer, more relevant experiences.
Added stablecoin withdrawals/deposits and automatic bitcoin conversion for P2P payments, with user instructions, fees, and irreversible-loss warnings.
Deliveroo added stricter reservation no-show rules, including late-arrival counts, a 48-hour dispute window, and possible reservation suspension or account termination.
Proton now limits refund requests to one per user within the 30-day cancellation window.
Medium broadened the personal-information warranty to cover any information you provide, not just data provided as a Newsletter Editor.
Shopify broadened account, payment, and tax terms, added automatic third-party payment accounts and checkout requirements, and strengthened its rights to suspend or remove content.
Meta changed the terms to name Meta Platforms, Inc. as the contracting party, expand ad/data language, and move dispute resolution to California courts for non-consumer cases.
Paramount expanded its privacy policy to collect more event, survey, and device data, added more ad-targeting uses, and broadened/clarified user rights and minors’ privacy terms.
Meta shifted the terms to U.S.-based governing law and courts, expanded ad personalization disclosures, and strengthened its liability disclaimers and account enforcement language.
Meta updated and reorganized privacy disclosures, adding clearer account-centre rights, broader ad/commercial-content use, and more detail on data use and deletion controls.
DoorDash added more detailed data sources, California request metrics, and SMS marketing opt-out instructions, while making mostly formatting cleanup changes.
Added Claude Platform on AWS terms covering Anthropic processing, data sharing, Marketplace billing, and AWS’s right to change or discontinue the service.
Meta shifted to a US-based, broader ad-supported terms framework, expanded data use and liability disclaimers, and changed dispute resolution to California courts for non-consumers.
Meta expanded ad, cross-account, and partner-use explanations, renamed rights management, and clarified some data uses and controller details.
Threads Terms shift governance to Meta Platforms Ireland, add ad-free subscription and consumer-law dispute rules, and soften account-removal notice rights.
Amazon Australia rewrote its terms, adding detailed Australia-specific sale, returns, liability, account, and agent-use rules while changing governing law to New South Wales.
Meta changed the governing company, expanded advertising/data-use language, and added stronger U.S./California dispute forum rules for non-consumers.
Amazon’s Australian privacy notice replaces the U.S. version, adds cross-border sharing language, and changes access/choice rights and advertising/privacy references.