Launching today

AgreeGuard
AI reads the fine print before you click "I Agree"
63 followers
AI reads the fine print before you click "I Agree"
63 followers
91% of people accept terms and conditions without reading them. AgreeGuard is a free Chrome extension that reads the fine print for you. One click, and in under 15 seconds you get a plain-English summary with red flags highlighted auto-renewals, data selling, hidden fees, waived legal rights, and privacy concerns. Works on any website. No account needed.










@krisba95 Thanks Christian! You nailed exactly why we built it that way — nobody wants to read a 4,000-word summary. They want to know "what should I actually worry about?"
Great question on retroactive use — yes, it works! Just visit any sign in/signup page page (like claude.ai or x.com) and AgreeGuard will analyze it on the spot. It will work if you are about to sign in or sign up - both. Because it detects the auth buttons and guards it - so when you click on them - boom AgreeGuard initialize its analysis. Here you can check the video: https://youtu.be/o6ncyT2Y0JQ
So you can absolutely audit services you're already paying for. Actually, that's one of the more eye-opening use cases - people run it on apps they've used for years and are surprised by what they agreed to without knowing.
@krisba95 Appreciate it.
I have clicked "I Agree" thousands of times without reading a single line. The idea of getting a 15-second summary with red flags sounds almost too convenient. How accurate is it with longer or more complex terms — does it catch the subtle stuff buried deep in the text, or mostly the obvious patterns?
@klara_minarikova Great question!
It’s actually quite good at catching subtle things like subtle stuff, sneaky auto-renewals, or vague data-sharing permissions.
That said, we’re transparent about it: every result is labeled as an AI-generated summary. For most everyday terms (SaaS, social media, e-commerce), it reliably surfaces what people usually miss. For highly complex legal docs, we still recommend checking the full text—which is why we include a “Read Full Terms” option.
The goal isn’t to replace reading, but to make sure you spot the red flags before hitting “I Agree.” That alone is a big step up from how most of us use terms today 😄