Terms
RunGuard is a pre-launch project run by a single builder. The SDK isn't released yet; this site is a waitlist, a blog, and some marketing copy. By using runguard.dev or signing up to the waitlist, you accept the terms below. They are short on purpose.
What this site is
- A static marketing site at
runguard.devdescribing a runtime SDK called RunGuard. - A waitlist that accepts an email address, posts it to our own server, and stores it in a SQLite file we operate.
- A "build in public" blog under
/blog/that publishes notes and data from the build.
That is the entire scope today. There is no published SDK, no paid product, no account, no dashboard, no API, no payment processor wired up, no SLA. When any of those land, this page will be updated to cover them.
Who runs it
RunGuard is operated by a single individual builder. There is no incorporated company behind it yet. When and if a company is formed, this section will name it. Until then, all references to "we", "us", "our" mean the builder.
What you may do
- Read everything on the site.
- Quote the blog with attribution and a link back to the source post.
- Submit your own email to the waitlist, once.
- Email us at the addresses on the privacy page.
What you may NOT do
- Submit someone else's email to the waitlist without their permission.
- Submit fake, throwaway-at-scale, or generated emails to inflate the waitlist count.
- Scrape the site at a rate that materially affects its performance for other readers (a sane crawler with backoff is fine;
robots.txtdocuments what's open). - Probe the waitlist endpoint or any future API for vulnerabilities without contacting us first. If you believe you've found one, email security@runguard.dev with the details — we won't sue you for a good-faith disclosure.
- Use the RunGuard name, logo, or mark in a way that suggests endorsement, partnership, or affiliation that doesn't exist.
Waitlist
Joining the waitlist gets you exactly one email when the SDK is publicly available — possibly preceded by one short announcement if the launch slips materially. That's it. No marketing drip, no upsell sequence, no third-party offers. You can ask to be removed at any time per the privacy page.
Intellectual property
The RunGuard name, the breaker mark in /assets/logo.svg, and the copy on this site are owned by the builder. The site's source HTML and CSS are openly viewable but not licensed for reuse without permission. The blog posts are licensed CC BY 4.0 unless a specific post says otherwise — quote freely, attribute, and link back.
When the SDK is published, it will ship under an OSI-approved open-source license; the license text will live in the SDK repository, not here. Nothing on this page constitutes a license to that future SDK; the SDK's own license file is authoritative.
No warranty
The site, the blog, the waitlist, and any code snippets shown are provided as-is, without warranty of any kind, express or implied — including merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, accuracy, or non-infringement. Code snippets in blog posts are illustrative; they have not been audited for use in production.
Limitation of liability
To the maximum extent permitted by applicable law, the builder is not liable for any indirect, incidental, special, consequential, or punitive damages, or any loss of profits, revenue, data, or goodwill, arising from your use of runguard.dev, its content, or the waitlist — even if advised of the possibility of such damages. Aggregate liability for direct damages, where it cannot be excluded, is capped at USD $50 or the amount you have paid for the use of runguard.dev, whichever is greater. (You have not paid us anything.)
Changes
We may update these terms in place. The "effective" date at the top reflects the most recent change. Material changes (new restrictions, new product surface, change of operator) will be flagged in the next blog post and at the top of this page. Continued use of the site after a change means you accept it; if you don't, ask us to delete your waitlist entry per the privacy page and stop using the site.
Termination
We can remove a waitlist entry, block an IP, or end your access to the site at any time if you violate these terms or use the site in a way that endangers it for other readers. You can stop using the site at any time, for any reason or none.
Governing law
These terms are governed by the laws of the jurisdiction in which the builder is ordinarily resident. Disputes arising from these terms or the use of the site will be brought in the courts of that jurisdiction. Where mandatory consumer-protection laws of your country of residence apply, those override anything in this section that would otherwise reduce your statutory rights.
Severability
If a court finds any clause of these terms unenforceable, the rest remain in effect; the unenforceable clause is to be read down to the narrowest form that is enforceable.
Contact
Questions about these terms: legal@runguard.dev. Privacy questions: privacy page.