Terms of Service
Last updated: March 18, 2026
The Basics
Clawlege is a free, open source educational resource. By using our website and materials, you agree to these simple terms.
What You Can Do
- Use all course materials for personal learning
- Share and recommend Clawlege to others
- Build and modify the example code
- Use our templates in your own projects
- Contribute improvements via GitHub
Open Source License
All Clawlege content is released under the MIT License, which means:
- You can use, copy, modify, and distribute our materials
- You can use them in commercial projects
- You just need to include our license notice
- We provide no warranty (see "As Is" section below)
What We Ask
- Be respectful: When participating in our community spaces
- Give credit: If you build something cool with our materials, a mention would be appreciated
- Follow laws: Don't use our materials for anything illegal
AI Usage and Responsibility
Clawlege teaches you to build AI agents. When you deploy these agents:
- You're responsible for how you use them
- Follow your AI provider's terms of service (OpenAI, Anthropic, etc.)
- Respect others' privacy and don't build harmful agents
- Test thoroughly before sharing with others
"As Is" — No Warranty
We provide Clawlege for free, so we can't guarantee:
- That the materials are error-free
- That your AI agents will work perfectly
- That we'll fix every bug immediately
- That the course will meet your specific needs
But we do our best to keep everything high quality and up-to-date!
External Links
Our course links to external websites (GitHub, AI providers, documentation). We're not responsible for their content, privacy policies, or terms of service.
Changes to These Terms
We may update these terms occasionally. When we do, we'll update the date at the top of this page. Since we're open source, you can track all changes in our GitHub repository.
Questions?
If you have questions about these terms, open an issue on our GitHub repository or join the discussion on Discord.
TL;DR
Everything is free and open source (MIT license). Be respectful, don't break laws, and understand that AI development comes with responsibilities. Questions? Ask on GitHub or Discord.