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Terms of Use

Last updated: July 2026

By using Vox · My Transcriber ("Vox", "the app"), you agree to these terms. If you don't agree, please don't use the app.

What Vox is

Vox is a client-side tool that runs in your browser to record or import audio, transcribe it using a speech-to-text provider you configure, and apply optional AI-powered transformations ("lenses" and "recipes") to the resulting text. Vox itself has no backend server and does not process, store, or transmit your content on our infrastructure.

Bring your own API key

Vox requires you to supply your own API key(s) for the transcription and AI providers you choose to use (such as OpenAI, Groq, xAI, AssemblyAI, or Gladia), or to run a local model on your own machine. You are responsible for:

Vox is not affiliated with, and does not control, any third-party API provider.

Recording other people: Laws about recording conversations vary by country and state — some require the consent of everyone involved. It's your responsibility to know and follow the rules that apply to you before recording someone else.

Your content

You own whatever you record, transcribe, or generate using Vox. We claim no rights to it — we don't even see it, since it never touches a server we operate.

Acceptable use

You agree not to use Vox for anything unlawful, to violate someone else's privacy or rights, or to attempt to disrupt or reverse-engineer the app in a way intended to harm other users.

No warranty

Vox is provided "as is," without warranty of any kind. Transcription and AI-generated content can contain errors — always review important output before relying on it (this matters especially for clinical, legal, or otherwise high-stakes notes). We do not guarantee the app will be error-free, uninterrupted, or compatible with every device or browser.

Limitation of liability

To the maximum extent permitted by law, we are not liable for any damages arising from your use of Vox, including but not limited to data loss, inaccurate transcriptions, or costs incurred with third-party API providers.

Paid plans

Some features may require a paid license. Purchases are processed by a third-party payment provider under its own terms. Refund policies, where applicable, will be stated at the point of purchase.

Open source

Vox's source code is publicly available. You're welcome to read it, and we encourage it — it's how we back up our privacy claims. Redistribution or commercial resale of the code or a derivative app is not permitted without permission; see the repository for the exact license.

Changes to these terms

We may update these terms from time to time. Continued use of Vox after a change means you accept the updated terms.

Contact

Questions about these terms? Reach out via the contact information listed on our GitHub repository.