Install
openclaw skills install @mohitagw15856/tos-decoderDecode a terms of service or privacy policy into what you're actually agreeing to, ranked by real-world impact. Use when someone asks 'what am I agreeing to', 'decode this privacy policy', 'is this ToS bad', or 'should I click accept'. Produces a ranked findings table with a 'should I care?' verdict per finding, covering data resale, arbitration and class-action waivers, unilateral changes, content licenses, and what deletion really means.
openclaw skills install @mohitagw15856/tos-decoderNobody reads the terms — that's the business model. This skill reads them and answers the only question that matters per clause: should you actually care? Most of a ToS is defensive boilerplate; the value is finding the three clauses that aren't.
Ask for these only if they aren't already provided:
Rank findings by what happens to a real person, worst first:
For each 🔴/🟡 finding, write a one-line "Should I care?" verdict tuned to this user's stated use — e.g. "Yes if you upload original work; ignore if you're just lurking." Check specifically: data collected vs. shared vs. sold; the exact scope of any content license (perpetual? sublicensable? survives deletion?); how disputes must be resolved; how terms can change; what deletion actually deletes.
1. Bottom line — accept / accept with eyes open / avoid, in two sentences, plus the single worst clause.
2. Findings, ranked by impact
| # | What you're agreeing to (plain English) | Where (quoted line/section) | Severity | Should I care? |
|---|
3. The deletion reality — what "delete my account/data" actually does, per the text.
4. What you can do — opt-outs, settings, arbitration opt-out windows if the text offers one, and what's simply take-it-or-leave-it.
End the artifact with, verbatim: "This is a plain-language reading, not legal/financial advice — laws vary by jurisdiction; confirm anything load-bearing with a qualified professional."
Consumer-contract review practice — impact-ranked clause triage, license-scope reading, dispute-clause analysis.