Style guide — terms of use
TopicFrom the PointSav Documentation
Editorial standards for terms-of-use documents (LEGAL genre) in the platform: opening clause, required sections, defined-term discipline, liability-disclaimer conventions, and the governance review requirement.
Terms of use state what a user may do with a service, what they may not do, and what the service owes them in return. Use constitutes acceptance.
Terms of use (LEGAL genre) are the binding rules that govern a user's access to and use of a service or site. They are published where users can read them before using the service — the opening clause makes clear that use of the service constitutes acceptance. Every terms-of-use document executed under this platform routes through factory-release-engineering governance for review before publication. This article is the human-facing standard; the machine-readable counterpart lives in service-disclosure/templates/terms.toml.
[edit]When to use this template
Use terms of use when:
- A service or site is made available to users outside the Foundry workspace.
- The service's permitted and prohibited uses need to be on record.
- Liability limitations and warranty disclaimers need to be formally stated.
Internal tooling used only by workspace members does not require public terms of use — a policy document covers internal-use obligations.
[edit]Structure
The template requires an opening clause and five sections in this order:
Opening clause (before any heading): One sentence stating what service these terms govern and that use of the service constitutes acceptance of these terms.
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Definitions | Each defined Term, stated once. Capitalised after first definition. |
| Acceptance | How a user accepts the terms — by signing up, accessing the service, or clicking "I agree." What acceptance binds: the user to these terms; the service provider to the described service. |
| Use of the service | Permitted uses, prohibited uses, and the user's obligations (for example, account security, accurate registration). Numbered for traceability. |
| Liability and disclaimers | The warranty disclaimer and the limitation of liability. Must be in plain language: excessive legalese reduces enforceability. Standard formulations ("THE SERVICE IS PROVIDED 'AS IS'") may be used but must be followed by a plain-language equivalent. |
| Changes to these terms | How the terms may change, what constitutes notice to users, and the effective date of changes. |
Optional sections (at the end): Governing law and jurisdiction, Contact.
[edit]Register and tone
Legal-plain. Active voice where possible. Every defined Term is capitalised on every use after its definition. Where the service touches investment or disclosure material, forward-looking claims about service features or roadmap carry "planned / intended / may / target" language, in compliance with Canadian securities continuous-disclosure requirements.