Copyright & DMCA Policy
This page covers two related things: who owns the content on Spenzaa, and how to report copyright infringement (including under the US Digital Millennium Copyright Act, "DMCA"). We've combined them because in practice they're always read together.
1. What Spenzaa owns
The Spenzaa apps, website, logos, design, text, illustrations, AI models and underlying code are the property of Spenzaa Inc. or our licensors, protected by copyright, trademark and other laws. You may not copy, republish, resell or create derivative works from them without our written permission. Short quotations with attribution and a link (for reviews, press, education) are always welcome.
2. What you own
Everything you put into Spenzaa — your transactions, notes, bill photos, SpenzaBook entries — remains yours. We claim no ownership over it. You grant us only the limited license described in our Terms to process it so the app can function.
3. Trademark
"Spenzaa" and "SpenzaBook", the Spenzaa logo and associated marks are trademarks of Spenzaa Inc. Please don't use them in a way that suggests endorsement or affiliation without asking us first at help@spenzaa.com.
4. Reporting copyright infringement (DMCA notice)
If you believe content available through the Service infringes your copyright, send a notice to our designated agent at help@spenzaa.com with the subject "DMCA Notice". To be valid, your notice must include:
- Identification of the copyrighted work you claim is infringed;
- The URL or precise location of the allegedly infringing material;
- Your name, address, telephone number and email address;
- A statement that you have a good-faith belief the use is not authorized by the copyright owner, its agent, or the law;
- A statement, under penalty of perjury, that the information in your notice is accurate and that you are the copyright owner or authorized to act on their behalf;
- Your physical or electronic signature.
We review valid notices promptly and remove or disable access to infringing material where appropriate.
5. Counter-notice
If your content was removed and you believe that was a mistake or misidentification, you may send a counter-notice to the same address including: identification of the removed material and its prior location, your contact details, a statement under penalty of perjury that you have a good-faith belief the removal was an error, and your consent to the jurisdiction of the courts where you reside. If the original complainant doesn't file a court action within 10–14 business days, we may restore the material.
6. Repeat infringers
Accounts that repeatedly infringe others' copyright will be terminated.
7. Misuse of this process
Knowingly filing a false infringement claim can make you liable for damages (including under 17 U.S.C. § 512(f)). Please only use this process for genuine copyright issues.