Last Updated: May 26, 2026
Terms of Service
Plain English. No legalese. If you have questions, just ask.
01 - Agreement to Terms
Iris is an open-source AI orchestration engine that lets you build and deploy autonomous agent workflows. By visiting this site, joining the waitlist, or using iris, you agree to these Terms.
If you're running Iris yourself, on your own hardware or infrastructure, you're governed by the MIT License, not these Terms. These Terms only apply to Iris the website, the waitlist, and iris.
02 - OSS License
The Iris source code is MIT licensed and lives at github.com/irisworks/iris-core. You can read it, fork it, run it, and build on top of it, which is the point.
These Terms of Service cover only irisworks.dev and any managed services we operate under the iris name. The MIT License governs everything else.
03 - Permitted & Prohibited Use
Iris agents can execute real commands, including Terraform, GitHub, Slack, bash, and more. That power comes with responsibility on your end.
You may not:
- Use Iris for anything illegal under applicable law
- Attempt to circumvent or escape sandbox isolation
- Abuse or exceed rate limits on third-party APIs
- Access or interfere with another user's environment or data
We reserve the right to suspend access for violations without notice.
04 - AI Agents & Generated Content
Iris executes real-world actions on your behalf. When an agent runs a Terraform apply, merges a pull request, or posts to Slack, those actions are real and may be irreversible.
Agent outputs are not guaranteed to be accurate. LLMs make mistakes. You are responsible for reviewing agentic actions before they touch production systems. We are not liable for the consequences of agent execution, whether the agent did exactly what you asked or something you didn't expect.
Build in approvals. Use staging environments. Treat agents like junior engineers, capable but worth supervising.
05 - Third-Party Integrations
Iris connects to services like GitHub, Slack, AWS, and others through credentials you provide. We route requests and do not control what those services do, and we're not responsible for their behavior.
You're responsible for your credentials and for ensuring your use of Iris complies with each third-party service's own terms. Don't give Iris more permissions than it needs.
06 - Waitlist & Early Access
Signing up for the waitlist means we have your email. That's it. We'll use it to send Iris updates with no spam and no selling it to anyone.
Joining the waitlist doesn't guarantee access, a timeline, or a specific feature set. If and when early access opens, it will come with its own terms.
07 - Intellectual Property
The Iris name and logo are ours. The source code is MIT licensed, as seen above. Anything you build or generate using Iris belongs to you. We don't claim ownership over your outputs, your workflows, or your data.
08 - Limitation of Liability
Iris is provided as-is. During early access there is no SLA, no uptime guarantee, and no commitment to any specific response time.
To the maximum extent permitted by law, we are not liable for any direct, indirect, incidental, or consequential damages arising from your use of Iris.
09 - Changes
We may update these Terms from time to time. If something material changes, we'll let you know by email. Continuing to use Iris after that means you accept the updated Terms.
10 - Contact
Questions about these Terms? iris@thirtysignals.com