Terms of Service; Didn’t Read is a productivity chrome extension. it's a free extension , it has 40,000+ active users since released its first version, it earns an average rating of 4.55 from 128 rated user, last update is 1220 days ago.
“I have read and agree to the Terms” is the biggest lie on the web. We aim to fix that. "Terms of Service; Didn't Read" is a user rights initiative to rate and label website terms & privacy policies, from very good (Class A) to very bad (Class E). This extension shows this rating for rated websites by an unintrusive icon in the address bar. You can click on this icon to get a list with the most important rated points of the website's term of services. Additional the extension will warn you when you visit for the first time a website with a bad rating. Optionally you can notify companies for their grades by sharing on Twitter, if you do not like this feature, simply head over the settings and hide the share button. This extension is open source. You can report bugs or propose new features at https://github.com/tosdr/browser-extensions.
You could download the latest version crx file or older version files and install it.
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64% user give 5-star rating, 9% user give 4-star rating, 9% user give 3-star rating, 9% user give 2-star rating, 9% user give 1-star rating. Read reviews of terms of service; didn’t read
You could find more help information from terms of service; didn’t read support page.
You could send emails to publisher, or check publisher's website.
More about manifest_file of terms of service; didn’t read.
You could click to report abuse of terms of service; didn’t read.
Nice to see how consumer-friendly companies' policies are at a glance.
Works very well for many websites, amazing that it is free. The list of good and bad is fantastic to have a quick glace when on a new website just to learn a little more about the website but also how I am being tracked on the internet.
Awesome service, everyone should have this. Sure, it doesn't support every website on the internet, but it's free and might just save you from signing up for a service you didn't *really* want.