These terms and conditions are something else… You have no rights, you have no right to sue in U.S. Courts, you have to submit to arbitration in Calgary, Canada. If 30 days of “good faith negotiations” fail, an arbiter will also be chosen by Peeple, Inc. to resolve the dispute. People who are profiting off of the worst part of human nature want you to engage in “good faith” negotiations, and if those don’t go well, they’re picking the arbiter. Once you sign up, all data is saved in Canada. They disclaim all responsibility or legal liability for slanders, falsities, libels or hate speech posted by users. They also disclaim a duty to take what (let’s be honest) amounts to cyber-bulling and harassment down. You may file no injunction against Peeple, Inc. to stop users from publicly posting trash about you. Damages are limited to $100 Canadian. Even if you delete the app, you still have no right to petition for injunction, jurisdiction within the United States or protection from content generated on the website. I am all for free speech, but this seems to create a haven for slander; bullying; false rape accusations; racism, sexism and every other kind of -ism and -phobia allegation from SJW’s; as well as dirty laundry from ex’s, former friends, hostile family members or disgruntled co-workers. The best part is that you can be reviewed without ever signing up for the application! The reviews will be stored digitally until you can dispute them, with the person who wrote them, by signing up for the app. Remember, what they say in the T&C’s is controlling, not what is written on the website. I would check what is written about me, but it is foolish to agree to these T&C’s.