Legal

Privacy policy

When you upload divorce documents, you're trusting us with the most sensitive details of your life. Here's exactly what we do — and don't do — with what you give us.

What we collect

The documents you upload to a case (court orders, motions, financial affidavits, your spouse's filings, anything else you choose to share). The questions you ask the assistant. Your name, email, and billing details. Standard server logs (IP address, request times) for security and abuse-prevention.

How we use it

We use your documents and questions only to answer you. The assistant reads what you upload, indexes it so it can cite the right page back to you, and returns plain-English explanations. We don't analyze your case for anyone but you.

Who can see it

You. That's it. Your files are encrypted at rest and in transit. No other divorce.talk user can see what's in your case. We don't sell or rent your data, and we don't share it for advertising. We don't use your documents to train AI models — ours or anyone else's. The one exception to all of this is a legal one: a valid subpoena or court order can compel us to disclose your content — see Legal requests below.

Subprocessors

We use a small set of vetted vendors to run the service: cloud hosting, payment processing (Stripe), and the language model that powers the assistant. Each one is bound by data-processing terms that match the commitments above. We'll list them by name on this page once we finalize the lineup.

PostHog (PostHog, Inc., US) — behavioral analytics on our marketing pages (home, pricing, sign-up). Before you sign up we capture clicks and page views tied to a per-device session ID. After you sign up your account ID and email are recorded against your PostHog profile so we can measure conversion and trial-to-paid. Session replay is enabled only on the static marketing pages and is turned off on the /try demo and the moment you sign in — so the demo documents you upload, the questions you ask, and the answers you receive are never recorded. Subscription events (started, paid, canceled) flow into PostHog from our server via Stripe, not from your browser.

Legal requests

Keeping your case private from other people is not the same as it being legally privileged. Your conversations with divorce.talk are not protected by attorney-client privilege, because divorce.talk is not your attorney. The documents you upload, the questions you ask, and the answers you receive may be discoverable — in a legal proceeding, including your own divorce, the other party may be able to request them and a court may order that they be produced.

We comply with valid legal process. If we receive a lawful subpoena, court order, search warrant, or other valid legal request, we will respond to it, and we may be required to disclose your content or account information. Where the law allows and it is practical to do so, we will make reasonable efforts to notify you before we disclose your content in response to legal process, so you have an opportunity to object. If a confidential, privileged conversation matters, have it with your licensed attorney, not with an AI tool.

Data retention

Your documents and case data stay in your account for as long as your account exists. Cancel and they're queued for deletion within 30 days. Server logs roll off after 90 days. Billing records are retained as long as tax law requires.

Your rights

You can export your data, correct it, or delete your account at any time from your settings page. We aim to respond to data requests within 7 days.

Contact

Questions about this policy or a specific request? Email privacy@divorce.talk.