@101101000 Maybe. In general (if you want advice about whether any particular site's terms qualify as a contract, you should hire a contract lawyer) there needs to be consideration exchanged to have a contract rather than a promise of a gift. So ToSs usually take the form of a statement of conditions under which the operators of a website voluntarily give you a gift: access to the service. They'll stop providing the gift if you violate the terms, but even if you don't, it's still their choice to provide it or not. Even if the ToS were judged a contract, it's written with the company's benefit in mind, not yours. So it'll guarantee you little or nothing, and typically have a clause where the website operator can modify the ToS at will and with no notice. "You get what you pay for."