For advertisers and content creators
Our Team understands the digital industry inside out and delivers legal expertise in a clear and accessible way. We've helped dozens of bloggers creators content makers agencies and SMM professionals navigate contract terms avoid unfavorable clauses and eliminate extra liabilities
We help you secure fair contract terms explain the difference between CPI and CPA show how to protect yourself from unfair criticism and clarify the distinction between copyright and exclusive rights to your content
We draft clear transparent terms and review your contract including reporting formats and deadlines proof of activity content restrictions preferred payment methods and ownership of exclusive rights
We quickly prepare cease-and-desist letters and respond to unjustified criticism directed at our client
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WHY CLIENTS TURN TO US?
New personal data rules from Roskomnadzor impose liability even on those who simply collect leads or run giveaways
Starting September 2025 advertising on Instagram and Facebook will be banned in Russia making it harder to run promo campaigns and integrate links or content
Laws on foreign agents fake news and intellectual property demand precise wording even in seemingly harmless ad campaigns
Since 2023 ad labeling with a special digital code is mandatory even for brand mentions in stories with fines reaching up to ₽700,000
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Laws are constantly changing and it's hard to keep up
A single mistake in one contract clause or how it's executed can cost more than the entire ad campaign
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Risks of payment term violations and potential legal disputes
High cost of filing a claim starting from $3000 just for the arbitration fee
Requirement to submit documents in English with certified translation
Case review timelines range from 6 months to a year including attorney fees
If you didn’t include mechanisms for pretrial resolution acceptance terms or payment deadlines you risk losing your claim even with message history or trackers
Some clients demand full transfer of rights to all created content including drafts mockups and scripts making it impossible to reuse or adapt your work elsewhere
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Contracts may also include bans on using your case logo or even mentioning your involvement which leads to potential fines and limits your portfolio
New bans and risks. How to spot the catch?
Some liability clauses like those covering brand reputation damage apply even to subjective criticism or a negative chat comment meaning you could end up paying to defend against third-party claims
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Mismatched expectations: the client demands KPIs they might not even pay for
Payment terms under CPI CPA CPL CPC and other models are often unclear and the client may define what counts as a valid action without transparency which makes it crucial to set fair measurable benchmarks
No clear terms on what counts as a successful integration how data is collected or what happens if the client cheats as a result you generate traffic but get no payment
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Risks for the client (brand agency company)
Risks for the contractor (blogger advertiser service provider)
TERGRIG FZE LLC — YOUR RELIABLE PARTNER IN THE WORLD OF DIGITAL CHAOS



Is the client’s “standard” contract really safe?
Full transfer of rights means losing control over your content for good
Unclear KPIs — the contractor may consider the goal met while you do not
Fraud and inflated metrics — without proper tracking and verification you risk fake or unreliable traffic
Missed deadlines — if strict timelines and penalties aren't clearly defined
Rights issues — if the contractor uses third-party content or music you could be fined too
No quality control — the content may violate brand guidelines or laws and all parties risk getting fined
No payment guarantee — the client only pays for “valid” actions under their own rules with the option to reject results
Liability for third parties including followers or subcontractors you don’t control
Portfolio ban — you can't showcase cases without written approval
Termination “for cause” — the client can cancel the contract over vague or subjective “breaches”