Last Updated: 6th of June, 2026
The goal of this page is to provide a no-nonsense, simple and human-readable explanation of legal aspects of using this app.
This is a very simplistic app that detects texts on PDFs you upload, tries to guess which service it came from, cuts out a section where it thinks the label will be and then takes all labels cut out and composes a single file with neat and printable labels. Go to Terms & Conditions for more details or GitHub for source code.
This app is designed to be used by people and small businesses for the express purpose of label printing. You aren't allowed to resell, embed or otherwise profit from this application without my express and written permission. The usage of the app is also expressly prohibited to "big companies" - over 100 staff or over £10m in yearly turnover. Go to Terms & Conditions for more details.
The app is a static site with one interactive page. All PDF processing happens in your browser — not a single byte from inside your PDF ever hits our servers. The site is served as static HTML from Vercel's CDN.
We capture aggregate product analytics via PostHog when labels are processed, downloaded, or printed. These events include counts (files, pages, labels, label types), size buckets, and timing — never filenames, label text, addresses, tracking numbers, or PDF contents. PostHog may also receive standard browser transport metadata (such as page path and user agent) and browser error telemetry for debugging, such as stack traces and error metadata.
Go to Privacy Policy for more details.
The app is hosted on Vercel (static, stateless) with DNS and reverse proxy managed by Cloudflare. Both collect cookieless infrastructure analytics that generalise and anonymise request metadata. Product analytics are processed by PostHog Cloud (EU).
Go to Data Processing Agreement for more details.
It means we never have access to information that could identify a specific person from your PDFs — because PDFs are never uploaded. Aggregate analytics may include non-identifying counts and browser metadata, but never label contents.
Go to Privacy Policy and Data Processing Agreement for more details.
The app is "as is" meaning you got to verify the input and output. I'll take no liability if you print off the output without checking it. Go to Terms & Conditions for more details.
No, I do not make money off of it. I got tired of Royal Mail's complacency with bulk label generation and crossed over 100 Photoshop files where I'd go and manually crop out all of the labels to print them on my A4 printer.
You can submit an issue in the GitHub Repository and I'll take a look.