Terms of Service
A Few Ground Rules
Nothing complicated here — just some common-sense guidelines for using this site.
Our Content
Everything we publish — the articles, diagrams, code snippets, and original images — is our work unless we explicitly say otherwise. We put real effort into researching and writing each piece, so we appreciate it when readers respect that.
You are welcome to share our articles on social media, quote a paragraph or two in your own writing (with a link back), or reference our work in presentations. What we ask is that you do not copy entire articles and republish them as your own. That is not cool, and it hurts independent publishers like us.
Code Snippets
Code examples in our tutorials are meant to be used. Feel free to adapt them for your projects. We do our best to make sure they work, but always test in your own environment — we cannot guarantee they will work perfectly in every setup.
No Professional Advice
We write about AI technology because we find it fascinating, and we try to be accurate. But our articles are educational content, not professional consulting. If you are making business decisions based on AI technology, talk to a qualified professional. We are bloggers, not your CTO.
Ads and External Links
We show ads through Google AdSense to cover hosting costs and keep the blog free. We do not control what ads appear — that is Google's algorithm at work. If you see something sketchy in an ad, that is on the advertiser, not us.
Similarly, when we link to external resources, tools, or research papers, we are pointing you to something we found useful. We are not responsible for what happens on those sites.
The "As Is" Part
We do our best to keep everything accurate and up-to-date, but AI moves fast. An article written last month might reference a model version that has already been superseded. We try to update older content, but we cannot promise everything is current at all times.
Changes
We might tweak these terms occasionally. Nothing dramatic — mostly clarifications as the site evolves. If we make a significant change, we will note it here.
Last updated: March 2026