Agreeing to this.
This is the legal agreement between you and Voyager Technologies Limited. If you use any app or service we operate, you’re agreeing to it. We’ve written it as plainly as the lawyers would let us. When the wording gets formal below, it’s because the law needs specific words.
If you don’t agree with any of this, stop using what we make. That’s the clean way out.
What we expect from you.
Your credentials are yours to keep private. If someone else gets hold of them and does something with your account, that’s on you until you tell us.
No reverse engineering, no load-testing us without asking, no using our stuff to break the law or other people’s things. The usual.
Who owns what.
The source code, the designs, the “Voyager” name and mark: all ours. Using one of our apps doesn’t give you a license to copy or resell any of it. Our open-source projects are the exception: whatever the license in that repo’s README says goes, and it’ll usually be MIT, GPL, or AGPL.
What we’re not on the hook for.
The short version: if our software costs you money, we’re not making you whole beyond what you paid us for it. The law forces us to say it in capital letters below. That’s what’s coming.
TO THE MAXIMUM EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW, VOYAGER TECHNOLOGIES LIMITED SHALL NOT BE LIABLE FOR ANY INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, CONSEQUENTIAL OR PUNITIVE DAMAGES, OR ANY LOSS OF PROFITS OR REVENUES, WHETHER INCURRED DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY.
Services come “as is.” We do our best, we don’t promise they’re perfect, and we don’t offer any warranty beyond that.
Which law applies.
If we end up in a legal argument, it gets sorted under the law of the place we’re registered. No forum-shopping.
Questions about any of this?.
Write in. A human reads legal mail here too: