Terms of use
Updated March 16, 2026
These terms cover the public marketing surface and public content, not private product agreements that may be negotiated separately.
The site exists to explain the product, publish public content, and provide direct ways to start a conversation. Using the site means accepting these basic public-site terms.
Commercial pilots, customer deployments, and product access should be governed by separate written agreements instead of being implied by the marketing surface.
Permitted use
You may browse the site, read public content, and use the published contact routes to ask questions about the product, partnerships, or pilots.
You may not use the site in a way that interferes with its operation, attempts to gain unauthorized access, or misrepresents a relationship with Cursivo.
Public content and accuracy
The site is intended to describe the product direction and current public surface as clearly as possible, but it should not be treated as a guarantee that every future feature, deployment path, or roadmap item will ship exactly as described.
Public materials may be updated, expanded, corrected, or removed as the marketing site and product story evolve.
Intellectual property
The Cursivo name, branding, site copy, and original public materials remain protected by applicable intellectual property rights unless a separate license says otherwise.
References to public code or public content do not grant rights over private product logic, customer data, or non-public commercial materials.
Links, external services, and contact
The site may link to public repositories, email clients, or other external services. Cursivo is not responsible for how third-party services operate once a visitor leaves the site.
If you contact Cursivo through a published email route, you are responsible for ensuring the information you send is appropriate to share through that channel.
No product commitment through the site alone
Nothing on this site creates a customer relationship, service-level commitment, hosting obligation, or production support promise by itself.
Any real product access, pilot, or commercial engagement should be confirmed through direct communication and a separate agreement where needed.