Recent changes
A chronological feed of substantive shifts in the legal documents we track. 113 changes so far.
Amazon’s privacy notice is localized for Australia, shifting to Australian entities and laws, adding cross-border disclosures, and changing some access, choices, and children’s privacy details.
Amazon Australia replaced the U.S.-focused terms with local Conditions of Use and Sale, adding Australian Consumer Law protections, New South Wales governing law, and detailed sale/return rules.
Adobe expanded and clarified terms on content access, analytics, generative AI, business-user control, termination, liability, and arbitration.
Expedia’s terms were substantially expanded with detailed booking, payment, cancellation, liability, content, software, and fraud provisions, plus updated arbitration notice.
Microsoft replaced a narrow IP-infringement notice with the full Services Agreement, adding broad terms on arbitration, data use, payments, account closure, moderation, and liability limits.
Roblox added disclosures on children’s persistent identifiers, service-provider processing, and retention periods, including age-assurance selfies and up to two years of security-related retention after account deletion.
Terms expanded from a copyright-notice section to Microsoft’s full services agreement, adding broad arbitration, account enforcement, payment, privacy, and Xbox data-sharing rules.
Tripadvisor changed the welcome offer from a stated benefit to a discretionary offer that may be presented only to some eligible users.
PayPal greatly expands its privacy policy to allow broader data collection, AI/automated decision-making, personalized shopping disclosures, and sharing with partners, merchants, affiliates, and service providers.
PayPal replaced a minimal terms page with a comprehensive user agreement adding detailed rules on balances, payment authorizations, fees, holds, taxes, and arbitration notice timelines.
Walmart greatly expanded its privacy notice, adding broad new data collection, advertising/sharing disclosures, VIZIO account linking, biometric/geolocation details, and regional rights information.
The terms were replaced with Microsoft’s full consumer services agreement, adding broad content licenses, account closure rules, payment terms, moderation powers, and binding arbitration for U.S. users.
GitLab expanded data collection and sharing, added DPF transfer terms, and narrowed deletion/privacy-request handling for paid or enterprise accounts.
Teams terms were replaced with Microsoft’s full Services Agreement, adding broad content, account, payment, moderation, arbitration, liability, and privacy rules that now govern Teams use.
Medium replaced an error page with a detailed privacy policy describing broad data collection, sharing, international transfers, and user rights under California and European laws.
Nintendo replaced router instructions with full website terms adding binding arbitration, class-action waiver, broad liability limits, termination rights, and expansive licenses over user submissions/content.
Robinhood replaced a minimal notice with a detailed policy allowing AI training on user interactions, targeted advertising, affiliate sharing, and broad data use for its new Social product.
Robinhood replaced a brief notice with broad terms adding sweeping liability disclaimers, indemnity, data-processing consent, unilateral suspension rights, and California/England court venue clauses.
Binance replaced a narrow KYC/automated-decision explanation with a comprehensive privacy notice that greatly expands disclosed data collection, sharing, profiling, AI use, and children’s account terms.
Binance replaced cookie text with comprehensive ADGM trading terms adding arbitration, broad custody/settlement rules, fee deductions, KYC, suspension rights, and liability limits.
Wise replaced a sparse notice with a detailed privacy policy expanding disclosed data collection, sharing, automated decision-making, marketing, international transfers, and country-specific rights and disclosures.
Wise replaced a receipt-help page with full customer terms adding broad account, verification, fee, suspension, card, and transfer rules, plus credit checks and limits on using Wise.
Cash App expanded credit score data use to include affiliate-held Block activity and clarified scores don’t guarantee product availability or eligibility.
Bolt replaced a basic cookie notice with a full passenger privacy policy detailing extensive data collection, sharing, retention, profiling, identity checks, ratings-based suspensions, and marketing uses.
Bolt replaced a cookie notice with full driver-provider terms adding commissions, payment rules, suspension/termination rights, and broad compliance obligations for transport service providers.