Terms of Service

ConvertMyPic is a free, browser-based image converter built on open-source code. These terms explain what the service is, what you are responsible for, and the limits of what we can promise. They are written in plain English because this is a small free tool, not enterprise software — and because the conversions run entirely on your own device, there is not much to govern beyond honest expectations. Last updated 30 May 2026.

1. Acceptance of terms

By using ConvertMyPic — the website at convertmypic.ai and the in-browser image converter it provides — you agree to these Terms of Service. If you do not agree with them, please do not use the service. There is no account to create and nothing to sign. Using the converter is itself your acceptance of these terms. Because the tool runs entirely in your browser and we do not operate servers that receive your files, most of what follows is about setting honest expectations rather than imposing obligations on you. If you are using ConvertMyPic on behalf of an organisation, you confirm that you have the authority to accept these terms on its behalf.

2. The service

ConvertMyPic is a free image converter that runs in your web browser. When you drop a file into the converter, your browser decodes it and re-encodes it in the format you choose — JPG, PNG, WebP, or AVIF — using codecs compiled to WebAssembly that execute inside a Web Worker on your own device. The encode and decode steps make no outbound network request, so your files never leave your machine and are never uploaded to a server. Because of this design, ConvertMyPic is free: there are no servers processing your images, so there are no per-conversion costs to recover. After the first page load, the app and its codec files are cached, and the converter works offline as a Progressive Web App. The service is provided for your convenience as a tool. We may change, update, or discontinue any part of it at any time without notice. We do not guarantee that the service will always be available, that any particular format or feature will be supported indefinitely, or that the in-browser codecs will behave identically across every browser and device. The converter is a utility offered as-is, not a contracted service with uptime or processing guarantees.

3. Acceptable use

You are solely responsible for the files you convert and for what you do with the results. By using ConvertMyPic you confirm that you own the images you convert, or that you otherwise have the legal right to process them. The service does not grant you any rights to content you do not already hold. You agree not to use ConvertMyPic to process or produce content that is illegal where you are, that infringes another person's copyright, trademark, or other rights, or that violates anyone's privacy. Do not use the tool to create or distribute unlawful material of any kind. In practice, we have no technical ability to see, inspect, moderate, or restrict the files you convert — the conversion happens locally in your browser and we never receive your images. That makes responsible use entirely your own. The absence of server-side monitoring is a privacy feature, not a licence to misuse the tool; it simply means the legal and ethical responsibility for your files rests with you.

4. No warranty

ConvertMyPic is provided "as is" and "as available", without warranties of any kind, whether express or implied. To the fullest extent permitted by law, we disclaim all implied warranties, including merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, and non-infringement. We do not warrant that the service will be uninterrupted, error-free, or secure, that conversion results will be accurate or suitable for any specific purpose, or that the output will meet your requirements. Image conversion involves decoding and re-encoding, and lossy formats such as JPG, WebP, and AVIF discard some data by design. Colour profiles, embedded metadata, transparency, and fine detail can shift or be lost depending on the source file, the chosen format and quality, and the browser you use. You are responsible for verifying any converted file before relying on it — open it, check it at full size, and confirm it is correct for your purpose. This is especially important for archival originals, professional print, or any workflow where the output cannot easily be regenerated. Always keep your original files; treat ConvertMyPic output as a derived copy, not a replacement for the source.

5. Limitation of liability

To the fullest extent permitted by law, ConvertMyPic and the people who maintain it will not be liable for any indirect, incidental, special, consequential, or punitive damages, or for any loss of data, files, profits, or goodwill, arising from or related to your use of — or inability to use — the service. This includes damage caused by a converted file being incorrect, corrupted, incompatible, or of unexpected quality. This is a free tool offered at no charge, and our total liability to you for any claim relating to the service is limited to the amount you paid to use it — which is nothing. Some jurisdictions do not allow the exclusion of certain warranties or the limitation of certain damages, so some of these limitations may not apply to you; in that case, our liability is limited to the smallest extent permitted by applicable law. Plain-English version: ConvertMyPic is a free utility provided in good faith with no guarantees. Use it as a convenience, verify the results, and keep your originals. If a conversion does not turn out the way you expected, we are not able to compensate you for it.

6. Open source and attribution

ConvertMyPic is built on open-source software, and the converter would not exist without the work of the wider open-source community. The conversions themselves are powered by established open-source codecs, each of which carries its own licence and its own credit: mozJPEG, Mozilla's optimised JPEG encoder, for JPG output; oxiPNG, a Rust lossless PNG optimiser, for PNG output; libwebp, Google's reference WebP implementation, for WebP; libaom and libavif for AVIF encoding; and libheif for decoding HEIC and HEIF files. All of these codecs are compiled to WebAssembly and run locally in your browser. We gratefully credit these projects and their contributors. We make no claim of ownership over them, and nothing in these terms restricts your rights under their respective open-source licences. The trademarks and project names mentioned here belong to their respective owners and are used only to identify the underlying technology accurately.

7. Changes to these terms

We may update these Terms of Service from time to time — for example, to reflect a new feature, a change in the codecs we use, or clearer wording. When we do, we will revise the "Last updated" date shown at the top of this page. Significant changes will be reflected directly in this document rather than announced separately, since we have no accounts and no way to email you. Your continued use of ConvertMyPic after a change takes effect means you accept the revised terms. If you do not agree with an update, the remedy is simple: stop using the service. Because the converter runs entirely on your device and we hold none of your files, there is nothing to delete or close on your behalf — you can simply navigate away. If you have any questions about these terms, the privacy practices behind them, or the open-source code, the project repository is the best place to start.