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miniterms — the final four gates before launch

May 2, 2026Dekimu

miniterms is the privacy-document engine for one-person SaaS. Business profile in, Privacy Policy and Terms out, versioned, jurisdiction-aware, drift-flagged when your stack changes. The waitlist has been open for weeks. The dashboard is real, gated to the founder cohort. Four decisions stand between today and a public open, and we're naming them in writing because the discipline of writing them down is what's keeping us from shipping the wrong shape.

What's already real

The generator runs. The business profile produces a Privacy Policy, Terms of Service, Cookie Policy, and DPA per jurisdiction. Versioning is in. The drift-flag — what marks a document as out-of-sync when you change a subprocessor or open a new region — is in. The dashboard's nine pages are scaffolded; documents and profile are interactive; everything else is shaped and waiting on the gates below.

The four gates

We're keeping the specifics off the public page on purpose. They're a mix of compliance sign-off, a default-publish-flow choice, and two UX decisions with audit weight behind them. Each is a one-line founder call with an hour of cleanup behind it. None are blocked on engineering. All are blocked on a written decision, which is the right kind of blocker for a product that has to be right rather than fast.

Legal-document infrastructure is the last place we want to ship a fast-and-loose first version.

What it costs

miniterms is the only ecosystem app with a standalone paid tier — €49/month for the full document set, DSAR inbox, audit trail. It's also bundled into Dekimu Hub Pro and Team. If you only want the legal floor, the standalone is yours. If you want the full operator's seat, you get miniterms inside the Hub bundle.

When the gates clear

The waitlist gets first access on the day the gates clear, with founder pricing locked for the lifetime of the subscription. We'll post the open in the same place — here, and in the inbox of everyone on the list. If you've been on the fence about adding your email, this is the post that says it's worth it.