Terms and Conditions
Last Updated: January 2026
Let’s be honest with each other from the start. Nobody actually sits down and reads a terms and conditions page unless something has already gone wrong. We get that. So we wrote this one the way we’d want to read it: plain language, no legal padding, no sentences that exist purely to make this document look longer than it needs to be.
Read through it when you get a chance. It tells you exactly what this site is, what we expect from people who use it, and where our responsibility ends.
This Site Is Independent
Before anything else, this needs to be clear: we have nothing to do with the official BeeTV development team. We’re not them. We don’t work for them. We’ve never spoken to them. We’re just people who use the app, ran out of patience with the poor quality guides available online, and started writing our own.
Everything you read on this site comes from our own testing and research. When we say something works a certain way, it’s because we tried it ourselves. That also means we’re not a source of official announcements, update schedules, or anything that would need to come directly from BeeTV’s developers. For that kind of information, you’d need to go to them directly.
Using This Site
You’re free to read anything here, share links to pages you found useful, and reference our content in your own writing as long as you’re crediting where it came from. What we’re not okay with is someone lifting our articles wholesale, stripping our name off them, and republishing them as their own work. That happens more than you’d think in this space and it’s something we take seriously.
Beyond that, the usual rules apply. Don’t use this site for anything illegal. Don’t run bots or scrapers against it. Don’t try to mess with how it functions technically. If you’re reading this as a normal person looking for help with BeeTV, none of this is directed at you; it’s for the small percentage of people who treat every website they find as something to exploit.
What We Actually Publish
We write guides. Installation walkthroughs. Troubleshooting articles. Feature breakdowns. Comparisons between BeeTV and other apps in the same category. That’s it.
We don’t host video content. We don’t run streaming servers. We don’t store movie files anywhere. We don’t provide links that take you directly to copyrighted material. What we do is explain, in plain English, how an app works the same way a tech blog might explain how to use any other piece of software.
BeeTV itself pulls streaming links from external sources around the internet. We explain how that process works from a technical standpoint. What those external sources contain, who runs them, and whether what they’re doing is above board in their respective jurisdictions is entirely outside our knowledge and our control. We can’t speak to any of that.
When Information Gets Outdated
Apps change. Features get added, removed, or moved around. Installation steps that worked perfectly on Android 12 sometimes behave differently on Android 14. We update our content when we catch these changes, but we’re not a large operation and things occasionally slip through before we notice.
If you follow a step in one of our guides and it doesn’t match what you’re actually seeing on your device, there’s a reasonable chance the app has changed since we last updated that particular page. Drop us a message by email and we’ll look into it. We’d genuinely rather know.
We’re not in a position to guarantee that every instruction on this site is perfectly current at every moment. Use your own judgment, especially when you’re changing settings on your device or installing software for the first time.
Links to Other Sites
We link out to external sites fairly regularly to download pages, supporting tools, related resources that we think are worth knowing about. Once you click one of those links and land somewhere else, what happens is between you and that site. We don’t control what they do, we don’t control what they show you, and we’re not responsible for it.
Linking to something isn’t the same as endorsing everything about it. We point people toward resources we think are useful based on our own experience, but things change and we can’t monitor every external site we’ve ever referenced.
Our Liability Is Limited
We put real effort into making sure what we publish is accurate and genuinely helpful. But if something goes wrong your device behaves unexpectedly after following our instructions, an app you downloaded based on our recommendation causes a problem, something we wrote turned out to be wrong and we can’t be held responsible for that outcome.
Installing third-party applications always carries some degree of risk. We explain those risks clearly in our content. The decision to proceed is yours and the responsibility for that decision sits with you, not with us.
This isn’t us trying to dodge accountability for our content. It’s just the honest reality of running an informational website in a space where the software we’re writing about isn’t under our control.
The Content Belongs to Us
The writing on this site is ours. The structure, the guides, the way we explain things that’s original work that took real time to produce. Copyright law covers it the same way it covers any other published writing.
If you want to quote a section of something we wrote, link back to the original page and you’re fine. If you want to reproduce an entire article somewhere else, ask us first by email. We’re usually reasonable about it when people ask properly.
These Terms Can Change
If we update this page in a way that actually matters, the date at the top changes and the new version is what applies going forward. We’re not going to make quiet changes that affect how the site operates without that date reflecting it.
If something in an update genuinely concerns you or you want clarification on anything, write to us. We’ll explain our thinking.
