General, non‑binding overview

Terms of use overview for Exoaff

This page outlines a high‑level, illustrative view of how online services and affiliate relationships are often approached in terms of acceptable use and responsibilities. It is not a substitute for specific contracts or jurisdiction‑specific advice.

This overview is not a set of operative terms, does not create any legal rights or obligations, and should not be relied on as legal, tax or compliance advice. Any actual Exoaff product or engagement would be governed by its own dedicated documentation and agreements, not by this general description.

1. Use of site and content

Material presented by an affiliate‑focused company like Exoaff is usually intended as general information about the company, its approach and potential areas of collaboration. Typical expectations for use may include:

  • Accessing the site in a lawful way and for purposes aligned with its intended audience (for example, brands, agencies and creators exploring partnership options).
  • Not using automated means to scrape or overload the site in ways that could degrade performance for others.
  • Understanding that information may be updated, corrected or removed over time as services evolve.

Unless stated in a specific agreement, site content is generally not intended as a personal recommendation or guarantee of results.

2. Availability, accuracy and no guarantees

Many online services are provided on an “as‑is” and “as‑available” basis. In practice, that often means:

  • There is no promise that access will be uninterrupted, secure or error‑free at all times.
  • Information may be simplified, summarised or out of date and should be cross‑checked with more detailed documentation where available.
  • Any examples, case studies or performance figures are illustrative only and not guarantees of future outcomes.

Concrete commitments about service levels, deliverables or performance would normally appear in a dedicated, signed agreement rather than on a general overview page like this one.

3. Roles in affiliate relationships

In affiliate settings, several independent parties usually work together while keeping distinct roles. In broad terms:

  • Brands remain responsible for the products or services they offer, including claims, pricing, fulfilment and customer support.
  • Affiliates (such as creators, publishers or media buyers) remain responsible for their own channels, content and audience interactions, including any disclosures that may be required.
  • A company like Exoaff typically focuses on structure, coordination and insights, not on controlling every aspect of how third parties act.

The exact allocation of responsibilities, approvals and limitations would normally be defined in the specific documentation for a given program or campaign.

4. Changes, local rules and next steps

Platform policies, advertising standards and local regulations around affiliate activity can and do change. Practices that are acceptable in one market or channel may not be appropriate elsewhere.

Adapting to context

Because of this, participants usually review new or updated rules from the platforms they use (such as social networks, ad networks or marketplaces) and, where needed, align those rules with their own agreements and internal policies.

If you explore working with Exoaff

If you later explore a specific engagement with Exoaff, you can expect to see more precise documents that describe that relationship, including any commercial terms, restrictions, intellectual property points and dispute resolution mechanisms that may apply.