What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? California
Hello.I have a software as a service app soon to be launched. I worked on it by myself and I don't have a proper business registered yet. I'm going to do it when I will earn some money first. So I need to write Terms and Conditions for my users to accept. And I don't know how to specify the party of agreement. I have seen other SaaS companies use something like this at the beginning of TOS:
I don't have a registered company, I only have the domain and my name. So could I use my domain as entity?
Note I'm not from US, I'm from EU, but this is Internet and my clients will be mainly in US, so it doesn't matter that much. Also this is a temporary thing. This will be an early access sort of thing, where user signs up and I personally create account for the user and communicate with him by email. I won't open it up into the wild (where an unlimited number of users can register and self-service themselves) until I have all business things sorted
Hello.I have a software as a service app soon to be launched. I worked on it by myself and I don't have a proper business registered yet. I'm going to do it when I will earn some money first. So I need to write Terms and Conditions for my users to accept. And I don't know how to specify the party of agreement. I have seen other SaaS companies use something like this at the beginning of TOS:
These terms of service (“Terms”are a legal agreement (“Agreement”
between you, either an individual or a single legal entity (“You” or “you”
, and The Company Inc, which operates The Service Name available at www.theservicename.com.
I don't have a registered company, I only have the domain and my name. So could I use my domain as entity?
These terms of service (“Terms”are a legal agreement (“Agreement”
between you, either an individual or a single legal entity (“You” or “you”
, and The Service Name (www.theservicename.com)
Note I'm not from US, I'm from EU, but this is Internet and my clients will be mainly in US, so it doesn't matter that much. Also this is a temporary thing. This will be an early access sort of thing, where user signs up and I personally create account for the user and communicate with him by email. I won't open it up into the wild (where an unlimited number of users can register and self-service themselves) until I have all business things sorted
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