Strict notice rules
You can lose rights by emailing instead of mailing.
AI-powered contract intelligence
Use BrieflyGo to scan a General Contract online and understand risky clauses in plain English before you commit.
Upload a PDF or DOCX. BrieflyGo highlights risky clauses, explains what they mean, and gives you a practical checklist for negotiation.
Workflow
Detected risks
Strict notice rules
You can lose rights by emailing instead of mailing.
Short claim deadlines
You can lose the right to complain if you miss a 30–90 day window.
Survival clauses
Obligations continue after termination and create future risk.
Broad definitions
A single word can silently expand your obligations and cost.
Cross-references to exhibits
Key fees or limits can be hidden outside the main body.
One-sided discretion
The other party decides what counts as breach or acceptance.
Quote
"You get what you inspect, not what you expect."
- W. Edwards Deming (attributed)
Why it matters
AI checks
“written notice” + strict delivery method“prevailing party” / “attorneys’ fees”“survive termination”“within 30 days” (short deadlines)“schedule” / “exhibit” / “order form”“including but not limited to” (definitions)“sole discretion” / “to our satisfaction”Why use AI
Use the scan as your first-pass review before you sign, renegotiate, or send the draft back.
FAQ
Can BrieflyGo scan a General Contract?
Yes. Upload the General Contract and BrieflyGo returns a plain-English risk scan focused on clauses, definitions, and negotiation pressure points.
Is this legal advice?
No. It's an educational AI risk scan designed to help you spot wording worth reviewing more closely.
When should I scan the draft?
Before you sign, and again after edits. Risk often changes in the final negotiation pass.
Glossary intersections
A connected layer across document intent, clause vocabulary, and contract-risk guides so the page keeps handing the reader to the next useful explanation.
Disclaimer: We do not provide legal advice. We translate legal language into plain English and help you prepare for a conversation with a lawyer.