Analyzed Companies
Browse TOS grades for popular apps and services.
Companies Doing It Right
FinePrint grades Terms of Service and Privacy Policies on a scale from A (excellent) to F (avoid). We evaluate data collection, data sharing, user rights, exit difficulty, and transparency. How do we calculate grades? →
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ChatGPT (OpenAI)
Based on a complete review of both the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy, OpenAI collects a significant amount of user data, including content you create, and uses it for various purposes including model training by default, though with opt-out options. The terms include mandatory arbitration and class action waivers, which limit your legal recourse.
Analyzed Mar 20, 2026
DecipherDocs.com
Based on a complete review of both the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy, DecipherDocs offers excellent privacy practices with minimal data collection and retention. However, its Terms of Service include broad disclaimers, liability limits, and a particularly aggressive indemnification clause that shifts significant risk to the user.
Analyzed Mar 20, 2026
Design.com
Based on a complete review of both the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy, Design.com collects standard data but includes several aggressive clauses that heavily favor the company, especially regarding content rights, liability, and dispute resolution for international users.
Analyzed Mar 20, 2026
Discord
Based on a complete review of both the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy, Discord offers a robust platform but with terms that heavily favor the company, especially regarding user rights, data usage for AI training, and dispute resolution.
Analyzed Mar 20, 2026
Facebook (Meta)
Based on a complete review of both the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy, Meta collects a vast amount of your personal data, shares it extensively across its family of companies and with third parties, and retains significant rights over your content and identity for commercial purposes. While some practices are standard for large social media platforms, the sheer scope and the explicit allowance for manual review of content and messages are concerning.
Analyzed Mar 20, 2026
Based on a complete review of both the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy, Google collects an immense amount of data across its vast ecosystem of services, devices, and third-party integrations. This data is used for extensive personalization, targeted advertising, and to train its AI models. While Google offers robust privacy controls and data export options, the broad content license, significant limitations on Google's liability, and the restrictive California-only dispute resolution are notable concerns.
Analyzed Mar 20, 2026
Based on a complete review of both the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy, Instagram's policies are comprehensive but heavily favor the company, with extensive data collection, broad sharing across Meta's ecosystem, and significant limitations on user rights.
Analyzed Mar 20, 2026
LinkedIn (Microsoft)
Based on a complete review of both the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy, LinkedIn collects a vast amount of data, uses it extensively for personalization, advertising, and AI training, and retains broad rights over user-generated content. While offering some user controls, the terms lean heavily in the company's favor, particularly regarding data use and dispute resolution.
Analyzed Mar 20, 2026
Based on a complete review of both the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy, Reddit's policies are standard for a large social media platform but contain several clauses that heavily favor the company, especially regarding user content rights and liability. While transparency is good, the broad content license, explicit AI training rights, and content retention after account deletion are significant concerns.
Analyzed Mar 20, 2026
Spotify
Based on a complete review of both the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy, Spotify collects extensive user data and reserves broad rights over user content, while limiting user recourse through mandatory arbitration and a class action waiver.
Analyzed Mar 20, 2026
TikTok
Based on a complete review of both the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy, TikTok collects a vast amount of user data, including sensitive and biometric information, and uses it extensively for personalization, advertising, and AI model training. The terms grant broad, irrevocable licenses to user content and severely limit user liability while placing significant burdens on users for dispute resolution.
Analyzed Mar 20, 2026
Uber
Based on a complete review of both the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy, Uber's terms are heavily skewed in the company's favor, particularly regarding dispute resolution and data usage. While transparent, the policies outline aggressive data collection, extensive sharing, and significant limitations on user legal rights.
Analyzed Mar 20, 2026
X (Twitter)
Based on a complete review of both the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy, X collects a vast amount of your data, grants itself very broad rights to your content (including for AI training), and imposes highly restrictive legal terms on users.
Analyzed Mar 20, 2026