Last updated: February 23, 2026
These Terms govern your use of cAIr. By creating an account or using the service, you accept them. If you don't accept, don't use cAIr.
cAIr is an AI conversation platform with 23 specialist routing agents covering careers, finance, fear, technology, mental health, energy, and more. Replies are generated by third-party large language models (OpenAI, Anthropic, Google) acting through cAIr's orchestration layer.
cAIr's replies are AI-generated text and are not professional advice. Specifically:
You need an Emergent-authenticated Google account to use cAIr. You are responsible for what happens under your account. Don't share your login. Tell us immediately if it's compromised.
Unused purchased credits are refundable within 14 days of purchase if you have used fewer than 25% of them. Contact us to request a refund. Gift redemptions and used credits are non-refundable.
You agree not to use cAIr to:
We may suspend or terminate accounts that violate these terms.
You own the questions you send. You grant cAIr a non-exclusive license to process them, store them, and use them (in aggregate, anonymized) to improve the service. Public shares (conversation links, gifted retros) are visible to anyone with the link until you revoke them.
cAIr is provided "as is", without warranties of any kind. We do not guarantee accuracy, completeness, or fitness for any purpose. LLMs may produce factually wrong, biased, or fabricated text ("hallucinations"). Verify anything important.
To the maximum extent allowed by law, cAIr's total liability for any claim arising from your use of the service is limited to the amount you paid us in the 12 months before the claim, or USD $50, whichever is greater.
We may change these terms; material changes will be posted on this page with a new "Last updated" date. You can stop using cAIr at any time. We may suspend or terminate accounts that violate these terms or for security / legal reasons.
These terms are governed by the laws of the State of Delaware, USA, without regard to conflict-of-laws principles. Disputes go to the state or federal courts of Delaware.
Questions about these terms: cairapp77@gmail.com.
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