Terms of Service

Effective date: May 11, 2026

Digg Inc. ("Digg," "we," "us," or "our") operates Digg at https://di.gg. These Terms of Service ("Terms") govern your access to and use of Digg.

By accessing or using Digg, you agree to these Terms. If you do not agree, do not use Digg.

1. Acceptance and Eligibility

You must be at least 18 years old to use Digg. By using Digg, you confirm that you meet this age requirement and that you can enter into a binding contract.

These Terms form a binding agreement between you and Digg Inc. If you are using Digg on behalf of an organization, you confirm that you are authorized to bind that organization to these Terms.

2. The Service

Digg is an automated, editorial product that aggregates public information from sources such as X, GitHub, and other public sites; generates AI-driven rankings, summaries, classifications, and topic signals; and publishes them at di.gg. Digg is provided as a public, free service.

Digg may add, change, or remove features at any time. We may also change or discontinue the service in whole or in part without notice.

3. Rankings, Summaries, and AI Content

Digg's rankings, summaries, classifications, sentiment signals, vibe scores, and similar outputs are editorial product features produced by automated processes. They represent opinion and inference, not statements of fact about any person, organization, or work.

Inputs to these processes include publicly available information. The outputs may be inaccurate, incomplete, out of date, or surprising. Digg does not warrant the accuracy of any ranking, summary, label, score, or AI-generated description, and you should not rely on them as authoritative.

If a public profile or item about you appears on Digg and you believe it is incorrect or should be removed, you may contact us at privacy@di.gg using the process described in our Privacy Policy. We review requests in good faith but reserve sole discretion over whether and how to act on them. Submission of a request does not create any obligation to remove or modify content.

4. Third-Party Content and DMCA

Digg references and excerpts content from third-party sources, including links to public posts, articles, repositories, and media. Digg does not own that source content, and ownership remains with the original rights holders. The presence of a link, excerpt, or summary on Digg is not an endorsement and does not imply any affiliation.

If you believe content on Digg infringes your copyright, you may send a notice under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) to our designated agent:

Digg Inc.
Attn: DMCA Designated Agent
Email: legal@di.gg

A complete DMCA notice must include (a) a physical or electronic signature of the rights holder or an authorized agent; (b) identification of the copyrighted work claimed to be infringed; (c) identification of the material to be removed or disabled and information sufficient to locate it on Digg; (d) your contact information; (e) a statement that you have a good-faith belief that the use is not authorized; and (f) a statement, under penalty of perjury, that the information is accurate and that you are authorized to act on behalf of the rights holder.

We may remove or disable access to material in response to a valid DMCA notice. We may also forward notices and your contact information to the user or source associated with the content.

5. Acceptable Use

You agree not to:

6. User Accounts

Public user accounts are not currently offered on Digg. Administrative accounts for Digg personnel are authenticated through Clerk and are governed by separate internal policies.

When public user accounts are offered, you will be responsible for the security of your credentials, for all activity that occurs under your account, and for keeping your account information accurate. You agree to notify us promptly of any unauthorized access. We may suspend or terminate accounts at our discretion under Section 13.

7. User-Submitted Content

User-submitted content is not currently accepted on Digg.

If and when Digg offers features that allow you to submit content (including text, links, comments, or other materials), you grant Digg a worldwide, non-exclusive, royalty-free, sublicensable, perpetual, and irrevocable license to use, host, store, reproduce, modify, adapt, publish, translate, distribute, and display that content in connection with operating, providing, and improving Digg and related services. You represent that you have all rights necessary to grant this license.

You retain ownership of your submitted content. Digg may remove or refuse to display submitted content at its discretion.

8. Paid Plans

Paid subscriptions are not currently offered on Digg.

If and when Digg offers paid plans, the additional terms presented at the time of purchase (including pricing, billing cycles, automatic renewal, taxes, and refund eligibility) will apply and be incorporated into these Terms. Failure to pay may result in suspension or termination of access to paid features.

9. Intellectual Property

Digg owns the summaries, embeddings, layout, code, and brand associated with Digg, including all related intellectual property rights. The names, logos, and look and feel of Digg are trademarks of Digg Inc. You may not use any Digg trademark without our prior written permission.

Third-party content referenced or summarized on Digg remains the property of its respective owners. Digg does not claim ownership of source content.

We grant you a limited, personal, non-exclusive, non-transferable, revocable license to access and use Digg for your personal, non-commercial use, subject to these Terms. All rights not expressly granted are reserved.

10. Disclaimers

Digg is provided "as is" and "as available," without warranty of any kind, express or implied. We disclaim all warranties, including merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, non-infringement, and any warranty arising out of course of dealing, course of performance, or usage of trade.

Without limiting the foregoing, Digg does not warrant the accuracy, completeness, timeliness, or reliability of any ranking, summary, AI-generated output, third-party link, or other content. You assume all risk associated with your use of Digg.

To the maximum extent permitted by law, Digg is not responsible for any content authored or controlled by third parties, including content reached through links from Digg.

11. Limitation of Liability

To the maximum extent permitted by law, in no event will Digg, its affiliates, or its personnel be liable for any indirect, incidental, special, consequential, exemplary, or punitive damages, including loss of profits, revenue, data, goodwill, or other intangible losses, arising out of or relating to your use of Digg, even if we have been advised of the possibility of such damages.

Digg's total aggregate liability arising out of or relating to these Terms or your use of Digg, regardless of the cause of action, will not exceed the greater of (a) one hundred U.S. dollars ($100) or (b) the amounts you paid Digg in the twelve months immediately preceding the event giving rise to the liability.

Some jurisdictions do not allow the exclusion or limitation of certain damages. To the extent your jurisdiction does not permit a particular limitation, the limitations above apply to the maximum extent permitted by law.

12. Indemnification

You will defend, indemnify, and hold harmless Digg, its affiliates, and its personnel from and against any claims, damages, losses, liabilities, costs, and expenses (including reasonable attorneys' fees) arising out of or related to (a) your use of or access to Digg; (b) your violation of these Terms or applicable law; (c) any content you submit to Digg; or (d) your infringement of any third-party right.

Digg reserves the right to assume the exclusive defense and control of any matter for which you are required to indemnify Digg, in which case you will cooperate with Digg in asserting any available defenses.

13. Termination and Suspension

We may suspend, restrict, or terminate your access to Digg, in whole or in part, at any time, with or without notice and at our sole discretion, including for any violation of these Terms.

Sections that by their nature should survive termination will survive, including Sections 3, 4, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14, and 15.

14. Governing Law and Disputes

These Terms are governed by the laws of the State of California, without regard to its conflict-of-laws principles. The United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods does not apply.

Any dispute arising out of or relating to these Terms or your use of Digg will be brought exclusively in the state or federal courts located in San Francisco, California, and you and Digg consent to the personal jurisdiction of those courts and waive any objection to venue in those courts.

Jury trial waiver. To the maximum extent permitted by law, you and Digg each waive the right to a trial by jury in any action or proceeding arising out of or relating to these Terms or your use of Digg.

Class action waiver. You and Digg each agree to bring any dispute on an individual basis only, and not as a plaintiff or class member in any class, collective, consolidated, or representative action. The court may not consolidate the claims of more than one person.

One-year time limit. Any cause of action arising out of or relating to these Terms or your use of Digg must be filed within one year after the cause of action accrues, or it is permanently barred.

15. Changes to These Terms

We may update these Terms from time to time. The effective date above shows when these Terms were last updated. If we make material changes, we will provide notice through Digg or other reasonable means. Your continued use of Digg after a change takes effect constitutes your acceptance of the updated Terms.

16. Contact

Digg Inc.
Registered in Delaware; offices in California

For terms-of-service and DMCA inquiries: legal@di.gg
For privacy and content-removal inquiries: privacy@di.gg
Website: https://di.gg