§ Terms of use
How we publish.
What we don’t promise.
Nowrap is an editorial site. By reading it, you accept that we’re humans publishing reasonable judgments about third-party software, that the third-party software changes after we publish, and that the only thing we promise is to keep our notes honest. The rest is the boring detail of how a small editorial operation actually works.
What we’re publishing.
Two kinds of content: tool listings (a short editorial profile of a piece of AI software with a verification date) and news articles (a short editorial dispatch about a release, policy move, or industry development). Editorial copy is our work.
For tool listings specifically, the “reviewed” date is the day a Nowrap editor verified four things from the outside: that the public website matches the description, that there’s a privacy policy, that the pricing is what we listed, and that the product appears to be actively maintained. This is not a hands-on review.We don’t test the tool against your specific workflow, data, or compliance requirements.
What we don’t promise.
- 01
That a listed tool will work for you.
Software changes. Pricing changes. Privacy practices change. We re-verify periodically but our notes lag reality. Treat every listing as a starting point, not a guarantee.
- 02
That a tool's claims are independently audited.
When a vendor says they're SOC 2 certified or HIPAA-ready, we link to their public statement, but we don't audit them ourselves. If you depend on a compliance claim, get it in writing from the vendor.
- 03
That every relevant tool is listed.
We list the tools we've vetted. Plenty of useful tools aren't here yet, and a few we delisted aren't either. Absence is not a verdict — it's just a backlog.
- 04
That news articles are exhaustive.
Dispatch articles are short editorial summaries with sourced links. They're starting points for your own reading, not full reporting.
- 05
Continuous availability.
We do our best to keep the site up. Things will occasionally break. If something's wrong, the dispatch is the fastest way to learn we know about it.
Using the editorial content.
Quote us. Link to us. Cite us. If you’re writing about an AI tool we’ve listed and want to reference our take, do it — a sentence or two with attribution and a link back is standard editorial fair use, and we don’t mind. Do not republish whole articles, paste entire pages into a wrapper site, or pass our editorial copy off as your own. Tool names, taglines, and descriptions of third-party software are factual references — those belong to the makers of those tools.
The full RSS feed exists so you can read articles in your feed reader without coming to the site. That’s a deliberate editorial choice; respect it by not stripping the attribution from the article body when you redistribute.
Submissions.
When you tip us about a tool through the submission form, you grant Nowrap a non-exclusive license to write about the tool factually using the public information you sent us. You don’t lose any rights to the tool, and we don’t owe you a publication. We may decline submissions for any reason, including not having the editorial bandwidth to verify them.
No paid placement.
We don’t take money to list tools, to feature them, or to write favorable copy. If we ever introduce paid surfaces (sponsorships, affiliate links, anything else), they will be visually distinct from editorial content and disclosed in this section before anything goes live.
Liability.
The site is provided as-is. To the maximum extent allowed by applicable law, Nowrap isn’t liable for losses arising from your use of, or reliance on, anything you read here. If a tool we list deletes your data, raises its prices, gets acquired, or shuts down — that’s a relationship between you and the tool. We’ll update our listing when we notice. We’ll write about it if it’s newsworthy.
Changes to these terms.
Significant changes to these terms will be announced in a dispatch at the time of the change, with the “last reviewed” date below updated. Quiet copy edits to this page (typos, clearer phrasing) won’t get an announcement.
Last reviewed 2026-05-09