legal
Acceptable Use Policy.
Last updated: July 6, 2026
CloudAgent gives coding agents real compute, network access, and repository access. That power comes with rules. This policy applies to everything you run through the service.
1. Use it for development
The service exists to run software development work: building, refactoring, testing, debugging, documenting, and reviewing code in repositories you have the right to work on.
2. Prohibited uses
- Attacking systems you don't own or lack written authorization to test — including scanning, exploiting, credential stuffing, or denial of service.
- Developing or distributing malware, ransomware, or tooling whose primary purpose is unauthorized access.
- Crypto mining or using workspace compute as generic bulk compute unrelated to development.
- Spam, bulk unsolicited messaging, or platform-manipulation automation.
- Processing data you have no right to process, or violating others' privacy or intellectual-property rights.
- Attempting to break out of workspace isolation, access other tenants, or probe the service's own infrastructure.
- Reselling access to the service without an agreement with us.
- Any use that violates applicable law or model providers' usage policies.
3. Fair use during beta
Workspace compute is included during the beta under fair-use limits. Sustained loads that look like bulk compute rather than development work may be throttled or suspended after a conversation — surprise cutoffs are a last resort, not a first response.
4. Security research
Good-faith security research against CloudAgent itself is welcome within responsible-disclosure norms: don't access other users' data, don't degrade the service, and report findings to wu@learnwithpal.org. We won't pursue action against good-faith research conducted under these rules.
5. Enforcement
Violations can lead to task termination, account suspension, or removal from the beta, depending on severity. Where the law requires, we may also report activity to authorities.