Terms & acceptable use
Snapshot is a limited, free public test that publishes interactive Julia from your GitHub repository to the web. Keep it simple: publish your own work and don't abuse the platform.
What you publish
You're responsible for what your repository builds. Every published page is tied to its public GitHub repository, commit, and owner — that's how provenance works, and how we handle takedowns.
Not allowed
- Malware, phishing, or pages designed to deceive.
- In-browser cryptocurrency mining or other resource abuse on visitors.
- Deliberately oversized uploads or attempts to evade the published size and rate limits.
- Anything illegal, or content you don't have the rights to publish.
Limits
Each project and account has size, storage, and publish-rate limits so one project can't degrade the platform for everyone. If you hit a limit you'll get a clear message. As Snapshot grows we may introduce paid plans for heavier usage and private repositories.
Report abuse
Found a page that breaks these rules? Email dalejamesblack at gmail dot com with the page URL and we'll take it offline quickly — every page is tied to a specific repo and owner.
Your data
Signing in stores your name, email, and GitHub account link (via WorkOS, our sign-in provider) plus the repositories you choose to connect. Joining the waitlist stores the email you enter. That's it — we don't sell data, run ad trackers, or profile visitors; page-view counts on hosted sites are aggregate and anonymous. To remove your data, disable your repos, remove your published sites from the dashboard, and email us — we'll delete the rest.
No warranty
Snapshot is experimental and provided as-is, without warranty or a durability guarantee. We may change limits, remove content, or pause publishing to protect the service. Keep your repository and build outputs as the source of record.
These terms will expand as Snapshot opens to everyone.