Legal
Terms & Conditions
Last updated July 2026
These terms govern your use of the Digital Extensions website and software (“the Software”), including Corpus Review, Corpus Chronology, and Markers Helper. By downloading, purchasing, or using the Software, you agree to these terms.
License
When you purchase the Software, we grant you a non-exclusive, non-transferable license to install and use it for your own professional or personal work. You may not resell, redistribute, or reverse-engineer the Software.
Your data is your responsibility
Because the Software is local-first, your files and work product remain on your own device and under your control. You are responsible for backing up your data and for keeping your device secure. We have no access to that data and therefore cannot recover it for you.
Professional judgment
Our tools are built to support expert work — legal review, chronology building, grading — by keeping information traceable to its source. They do not provide legal, medical, or professional advice, and they do not make judgments on your behalf. Any conclusion you draw using the Software remains your own professional responsibility.
Acceptable use
You agree to use the Software lawfully and not to use it to infringe the rights of others or to violate any applicable regulation governing the material you work with.
Disclaimer of warranties
The Software is provided “as is,” without warranties of any kind, whether express or implied, including fitness for a particular purpose. We do not warrant that the Software will be uninterrupted or error-free.
Limitation of liability
To the maximum extent permitted by law, Digital Extensions will not be liable for any indirect, incidental, or consequential damages arising from your use of the Software.
Changes to these terms
We may update these terms from time to time. Material changes will be reflected in the “last updated” date above.
Contact
Questions about these terms? Reach us through the contact form.
Placeholder to confirm before launch: legal entity name and the governing law / jurisdiction clause. Have these terms reviewed by counsel before relying on them.