Basic usage terms help define how the site, tools, and generated outputs may be used.
These terms explain the intended use of the website, the limits of what the tools can promise, and the responsibilities visitors take on when using generated outputs or site content.
General site use
Visitors may use the site and its tools for lawful purposes related to website publishing, SEO, content operations, technical review, campaign tracking, and similar operational work.
Users should not rely on generated outputs without reviewing them in the context of their own site, because correct implementation still depends on page structure, platform behavior, business context, and policy requirements.
Content and generated output
Generated snippets, templates, examples, and checklists are provided as a practical starting point rather than a guarantee of indexing, rankings, measurement accuracy, ad approval, ad revenue, or rich results.
Search behavior and platform outcomes depend on many factors outside the scope of a single tool, including site quality, content accuracy, crawlability, implementation quality, policy compliance, and platform-specific eligibility.
Advertising and third-party services
The site may use third-party services such as hosting providers, analytics tools, ad networks, or sponsor systems. Those services may have separate terms, technical limits, and approval rules that visitors or site owners must follow independently.
Use of advertising-related features does not create any guarantee that ads will serve, remain active, or generate revenue at a particular level.
Changes and availability
Features, templates, examples, policies, and site content may change over time.
Availability, exact output, and integration behavior may also change as the tools are updated, refined, or adapted to third-party platform changes.
Limitation of responsibility
To the extent reasonably permitted, visitors use the site and its outputs at their own discretion and are responsible for reviewing what they publish or implement on a live website.
The site owner should not be treated as responsible for losses, policy issues, indexing changes, advertising decisions, or business outcomes caused by unreviewed or incorrect implementation.
Operational note
If the site changes materially, the terms should be reviewed at the same time as the product, monetization, or privacy pages.
A small site works best when its legal pages stay short, current, and easy to find in the footer.
These terms are meant to support a practical content site. Keep them aligned with the real features, ads, and third-party services on the live domain.