Here are some clearer diffs:<p>Terms of Service: <a href="https://draftable.com/gmail/compare/tumblr-terms-65f4a0524cb54f77/shared" rel="nofollow">https://draftable.com/gmail/compare/tumblr-terms-65f4a0524cb...</a><p>Privacy Policy: <a href="https://draftable.com/gmail/compare/tumblr-privacy-6602dd29a13cab3e/shared" rel="nofollow">https://draftable.com/gmail/compare/tumblr-privacy-6602dd29a...</a>
If you're younger than 13, don't use Tumblr.<p>-Ask your parents for an Xbox or try books.<p>+Ask your parents for a Playstation 4, or try books.<p>Playstation 4 confirmed next-gen console winner by Yahoo. Is that good or bad?
<i>-<p> If you are a registered user, you can access and delete most information associated with your Account<p>+<p> If you are a registered user, you can access most information associated with your Account</i>
You can get rid of the irrelevant white-space changes by adding ?w=1 to the URL:<p><a href="https://github.com/tosdr/tosback2/commit/957775e52dad75012db665f10aa628a6915a241b?w=1#diff-2" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/tosdr/tosback2/commit/957775e52dad75012db...</a>
It's hard to tell which of these changes are minor legal optimizations, and which are actually suggestive of a different relationship between Tumblr and its users.<p>In the top paragraph, for instance, "personal" is struck from the phrase: "takes the private nature of your personal information very seriously." Are they taking _more_ of my information seriously or are they subtly suggesting that my information is no longer "personal"?<p>It'd be nice to see a finer-grained diff.
The first line of diff tells me how serious they took grammar into account...<p>From <i>Tumblr, Inc. ("Tumblr", "we", "us", or "our") </i> to <i>Tumblr, Inc. ("Tumblr," "we," "us," or "our")</i>