Looking for feedback on Trothix, an AI that explains contracts in plain English (5-10 min)

Hi everyone!

I've been building Trothix, an AI web app that explains contracts in plain English and highlights potentially risky clauses.

I'm looking for a few people to spend 5-10 minutes testing it and giving honest feedback.

What you'll do:

• Upload or paste a contract (or use a sample)

• Review the AI analysis

• Fill out a short feedback form

I'm especially interested in hearing from freelancers, founders, students, or anyone who regularly signs contracts.

No signup required, and I'm not selling anything. I'm simply trying to improve the product before a wider release.

Thanks!

The website is below. After testing, the feedback form is linked from the website.

reddit.com
u/btwary — 1 day ago

Looking for feedback on Trothix, an AI that explains contracts in plain English (5-10 min)

Hi everyone!

I've been building Trothix, an AI web app that explains contracts in plain English and highlights potentially risky clauses.

I'm looking for a few people to spend 5-10 minutes testing it and giving honest feedback.

What you'll do:

• Upload or paste a contract (or use a sample)

• Review the AI analysis

• Fill out a short feedback form

I'm especially interested in hearing from freelancers, founders, students, or anyone who regularly signs contracts.

No signup required, and I'm not selling anything. I'm simply trying to improve the product before a wider release.

Thanks!

The website is below. After testing, the feedback form is linked from the website.

reddit.com
u/btwary — 1 day ago

Built an AI that explains contracts in plain English. Looking for developer feedback before I keep building.

I've been building an AI contract review tool over the last few weeks.

The goal isn't to replace lawyers. It's simply to help people understand what they're agreeing to before clicking "I Agree" or signing a contract.

Recently, a Reddit user tested it with a real contract and gave feedback that completely changed my roadmap. They pointed out that:

  • My product name wasn't unique, so I rebranded it to Trothix.
  • The current text limit is too small for many real-world contracts.
  • PDF upload is far more important than I originally thought.

I've already shipped the rebrand and I'm working through the remaining feedback.

Now I'd love some developer perspectives before I keep adding features.

A few questions:

  • Does the UI feel trustworthy?
  • Is the workflow obvious from the homepage?
  • What would you improve before I build more features?
  • If you were building this, what would you prioritize next?

If anyone wants to try it, I'm happy to share the demo in the comments rather than putting a link in the post.

I'd genuinely appreciate honest feedback, whether it's about the product, UX, or technical direction.

reddit.com
u/btwary — 2 days ago

Trothix, a free AI tool that explains contracts in plain English before you sign

I built Trothix, a free AI contract review tool that helps you understand contracts before signing them.

It currently supports:

  • Plain-English summaries
  • Important clauses highlighted
  • Risk explanations
  • Key obligations extracted
  • No signup required
  • Text isn't stored after processing

After feedback from Reddit, I recently:

  • Rebranded the project
  • Improved the landing page
  • Started working on PDF upload support
  • Began increasing the document size limit for larger real-world contracts

I'd really appreciate any feedback on:

  • Are the summaries easy to understand?
  • Are the highlighted risks useful?
  • What feature would you add next?
reddit.com
u/btwary — 2 days ago
▲ 2 r/alphaandbetausers+1 crossposts

Update: My first real user completely changed the direction of my AI contract reviewer.

Yesterday I shared the first MVP of my AI contract review tool here.

One Redditor took the time to actually test it with a real document instead of just looking at screenshots, and the feedback was incredibly useful.

Here are the biggest things I learned:

  • My original product name wasn't distinctive enough, so I rebranded the project to Trothix.
  • They tried to upload a real lease and immediately ran into my 18k character limit. It turns out many real contracts are far larger than I expected.
  • They tested it with a ~4,000-word package addendum instead.

Their feedback:

>

They also pointed out that PDF upload is the first feature they'd expect, so that's now at the top of my roadmap.

This was a good reminder that one thoughtful user can uncover more than dozens of hours of self-testing.

I'm continuing to iterate based on real feedback before worrying about growth or marketing.

Thanks again to everyone who commented on the first post.

https://trothix-btwarys-projects.vercel.app/

u/btwary — 1 day ago

I wrote a fictional AI company's Terms of Service to test my AI contract reviewer. It flagged things I'd actually stop and read.

I built a small project called ClearClause that translates contracts and Terms of Service into plain English.

To test it, I wrote a completely fictional Terms of Service for an imaginary company called Pulse AI. It's packed with the kind of legal clauses most people never read, including:

  • AI training on user conversations
  • Emotional sentiment tracking
  • Automatic subscription renewals
  • Liability exclusions
  • Mandatory arbitration

The screenshots are the analysis generated by ClearClause.

I'm not trying to replace legal advice. The goal is simply to help people understand what they're agreeing to before clicking "I Agree" or signing a contract.

I'd really appreciate honest feedback:

  • Is the summary actually easy to understand?
  • Are the highlighted risks useful?
  • Would you trust something like this before signing an agreement?
  • What would you improve?

If anyone wants to try it themselves, I'll post the demo link in the comments if that's allowed.

Thanks! I'm still validating the idea and every piece of feedback helps.

u/btwary — 3 days ago

I wrote a fictional AI company's Terms of Service to test my AI contract reviewer. It flagged things I'd actually stop and read.

I built a small project called Trothix that translates contracts and Terms of Service into plain English.

To test it, I wrote a completely fictional Terms of Service for an imaginary company called Pulse AI. It's packed with the kind of legal clauses most people never read, including:

  • AI training on user conversations
  • Emotional sentiment tracking
  • Automatic subscription renewals
  • Liability exclusions
  • Mandatory arbitration

The screenshots are the analysis generated by Trothix

I'm not trying to replace legal advice. The goal is simply to help people understand what they're agreeing to before clicking "I Agree" or signing a contract.

I'd really appreciate honest feedback:

  • Is the summary actually easy to understand?
  • Are the highlighted risks useful?
  • Would you trust something like this before signing an agreement?
  • What would you improve?

If anyone wants to try it themselves, I'll post the demo link in the comments if that's allowed.

Thanks! I'm still validating the idea and every piece of feedback helps.

u/btwary — 3 days ago

ClearClause: Understand contracts before you sign them

I built ClearClause, a free web tool that explains contracts, leases, and Terms of Service in plain English.

Paste a document and it will:

• Summarize what you're agreeing to
• Highlight clauses worth reviewing
• Explain the biggest risks
• Show practical consequences

No account required. Nothing you paste is stored.

I'm looking for feedback on the UX and explanations.

(I'll share the link in the comments if the subreddit rules allow it.)

u/btwary — 3 days ago

I built ClearClause to help people understand legal documents before signing. Looking for honest feedback.

Hi everyone,

I've been building ClearClause, a web app that helps people understand legal documents by translating legal language into plain English, explaining contracts clause by clause, and highlighting important risks and obligations.

The idea came from realizing how often people click "I Agree" or sign contracts without really understanding what they're agreeing to.

The app is still in the early stages, and I'm trying to validate whether it solves a real problem before adding more features.

Current features:

  • Plain-English summaries
  • Clause-by-clause explanations
  • Key risks highlighted
  • No signup required
  • Sample documents included

I'd really appreciate feedback on:

  • Would you actually use something like this?
  • Which document types should I prioritize?
  • What would make you trust a tool like this?
  • What would stop you from trying it?

Try it here:
https://clear-clause-three.vercel.app/

Thanks! I'm happy to answer questions and would appreciate any honest criticism.

reddit.com
u/btwary — 4 days ago
▲ 1 r/design_critiques+1 crossposts

If you were reviewing this dashboard for a client, what's the first thing you'd change?

I've been practicing presentation design and trying to improve through feedback rather than adding more effects.

If you could change one thing on this dashboard before it goes into a portfolio, what would it be?

It could be:

  • hierarchy
  • typography
  • spacing
  • charts
  • colors
  • readability

Honest criticism is appreciated.

u/btwary — 5 days ago