12 articles
An addendum adds new terms to a contract. An amendment rewrites existing ones. Choosing the wrong label creates contradictions a court can resolve against you.
A non-compete clause bars you from working for competitors after leaving a job. Enforceability hinges on your state, the clause's duration, geographic scope, and the business interest it protects.
AI contract review handles standard agreements well. These five contract types need human legal judgment — here's why.
Contract automation saves time, but the costs beyond the subscription price are real. Here's what vendors don't put in the marketing.
AI contract review tools have real limitations. Here are the scenarios where they fall short and what to do instead.
A severability clause keeps your contract enforceable even if a court strikes one provision. Without it, a single void term can destroy the entire agreement.
A limitation of liability clause caps the maximum amount you can be sued for if a contract goes wrong. Without one, a $10,000 project can generate $200,000+ in damage claims.
Learn the legal difference between IP assignment and licensing. Understand work-for-hire law, the CCNV v. Reid test, and how to protect your creative rights.
72% of freelancers experience non-payment. An MSA + SOW contract structure with kill fees, IP-tied-to-payment, and change order clauses stops scope creep and guarantees payment.
Learn how to structure payment terms, deposits, kill fees, and late fee clauses that protect freelancers and SMBs from late-paying clients.
Force majeure is a contract clause excusing obligations when disasters like pandemics, natural disasters, or government orders make performance impossible. Here's what you need to know.
A dispute resolution clause determines whether you'll spend $2,000 or $200,000 resolving a contract conflict — and the method you accept sets the cost of justice.
This site provides general legal information, not legal advice. Consult a qualified attorney for your specific situation.