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GoFundMe’s Updated Terms Totally Forgot About Their Whole Ban on Abortion Campaigns

Bailey's abortion

Perhaps we should give it a rest seeing as today is the Lord’s day and all but hey, you know us, ever vigilant.

A few folks have forwarded us this screenshot going around, so we wanted to dig into it lest we get sent the same screenshot for a 15th time. The following comes from a Terms of Service/Privacy Policy update published on the GoFundMe site:

Let’s start with this:

We’ve updated the User Conduct section of the Terms of Service in a few ways, mostly to further restrict the use of our platform to create campaigns that are misleading and to heighten the prohibition of campaigns that promote intolerance of any kind.

Here’s an archived copy of the GoFundMe Terms of Service effective April 29, 2015, and an exhausting but not exhaustive list of items forbidden on its platform at that time:

We’ll admit, “Sorcery, unexplained sciences or absurd claims” kind of made us laugh.

Anyhoo, fast-forward to 2016. The updated GoFundMe terms and conditions have changed quite a bit compared to those of 2015, but still aren’t intended to serve as a be all end all list of the nonsense that GoFundMe doesn’t want on its site:

[Y]ou agree to not use the Services to:

You’ll notice there is no longer a special entry barring abortion campaigns — a provision which GoFundMe got a bunch of shit for in 2014 after it shut down a page seeking to crowdfund her pregnancy termination — nor a specific entry for ending the life of an animal. It remains to be seen if this omission was intentional on their part; we can pretty safely assume their legal team thoroughly covered their butts on this one. We’re guessing “sensitive content” could potentially include abortion talk, but who knows.

It’s also worth noting that GoFundMe reserves the right — just as in the past — to remove any campaign for any reason. Which means that they technically can still kill your abortion campaign (no pun), but they aren’t blatantly forbidding it.

Also worth noting are some changes to how GoFundMe allows you to use the “intellectual property” of others, but we’ll dig into that part in a follow-up post.

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