Veldarium
Legal

Terms of Service

Last updated: May 2026

1. Agreement to terms

By accessing or using Veldarium.com, you agree to be bound by these terms. If you do not agree, do not use the site.

2. What this site is

Veldarium.com is a static informational site for an early-stage company building AI-native vertical operating systems for messy real-world work. It does not provide a hosted product, platform, or runtime, and demo screens are illustrative. All content is for informational purposes only.

3. No professional advice

Nothing on this site constitutes legal, financial, medical, or business advice. Any architecture review, template, or framework provided by Veldarium is informational material, not a certification or guarantee of safety, compliance, or outcome.

4. No warranty

The site and all content are provided "as is" without warranty of any kind, express or implied. We do not warrant that the site will be error-free, secure, or available at all times.

5. Limitation of liability

To the maximum extent permitted by law, Veldarium and its founders shall not be liable for any indirect, incidental, special, consequential, or punitive damages arising out of or relating to your use of the site or any services.

6. Intellectual property

All content on this site, including text, graphics, logos, and templates, is the property of Veldarium unless otherwise noted. Templates provided for download may be used for internal business purposes. They may not be resold, redistributed, or presented as your own original work.

7. Governing law

These terms shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the jurisdiction in which Veldarium is organized, without regard to conflict of law principles.

8. Changes to terms

We may modify these terms at any time. Changes will be posted on this page with an updated date. Continued use of the site after changes constitutes acceptance.

9. Contact

Questions about these terms should be sent to founders@veldarium.com.

Bring one workflow that breaks in the real world.

If it has messy intake, unclear ownership, blocked work, human approval, audit pressure, or outcome memory, it may belong inside a governed AI operating system.