terms.
The agreement between you and us. Plain English where we can — lawyer-shaped where we must.
About Postlane
Postlane (“we”, “us”, “our”) operates the website at postlane.dev and the Postlane desktop application. If you have any questions about these terms, please contact us.
Acceptance of terms
By accessing or using postlane.dev or the Postlane desktop application, you confirm that you accept these terms and agree to comply with them. If you do not agree, you must not use our services.
Changes to these terms
We may update these terms from time to time. The date at the top of this page shows when they were last revised. Continued use of our services after any update constitutes acceptance of the revised terms.
Changes to our services
We may update our website and application to reflect changes to our product or business priorities. We do not guarantee that any particular feature will remain available indefinitely.
Availability
We do not guarantee that our website or services will always be available or uninterrupted. We may suspend or restrict access for operational reasons without notice.
Your account
You are responsible for maintaining the confidentiality of your account credentials and for all activity that occurs under your account. You must notify us immediately of any unauthorised use.
Acceptable use
You must not use our services to:
- —violate any applicable law or regulation
- —transmit any unsolicited commercial communications
- —upload or transmit any material that is unlawful, harmful, or infringing
- —interfere with or disrupt our services or servers
- —attempt to gain unauthorised access to any part of our services
Intellectual property and source code
Website content
We own or licence all intellectual property rights in the content published on postlane.dev, including marketing copy, graphics, and documentation prose. You may not reproduce or republish that content without our written permission.
Desktop application and CLI
The Postlane desktop application and CLI are published as source-available software under the Business Source License 1.1 (BUSL 1.1). Under that licence:
- —You may copy, modify, and redistribute the source code for non-production use and for personal non-commercial use without a separate commercial licence from us.
- —Commercial production use that falls outside those permitted uses requires a paid subscription or a separate licence from us.
- —Four years after the first public release of each version, the licence automatically converts to Apache 2.0.
The full terms are in the LICENSE file in each repository.
Documentation
Our documentation (docs.postlane.dev) is released under the MIT Licence.
No data mining or scraping
You must not use automated tools to access, scrape, crawl, or extract data from our website or services. You must not use any content from our services to train machine learning or artificial intelligence models without our explicit written consent.
Third-party links
Our website may contain links to third-party websites. Those links are provided for your convenience only. We have no control over and accept no responsibility for their content or privacy practices.
Disclaimer of warranties
Our services are provided “as is” without any warranty, express or implied, including warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, or non-infringement. We do not warrant that our services will meet your requirements or that they will be error-free.
Limitation of liability
To the fullest extent permitted by law, we will not be liable for any indirect, incidental, special, consequential, or punitive damages arising from your use of our services, even if we have been advised of the possibility of such damages.
Our total liability to you for any claim arising from these terms or your use of our services shall not exceed the amount you paid us in the twelve months preceding the claim.
Governing law
These terms and any dispute arising from them are governed by the law of England and Wales. The courts of England and Wales have exclusive jurisdiction over any disputes, unless you are a consumer resident in Scotland or Northern Ireland, in which case the courts of your country of residence will have jurisdiction.