Built for learning, not cheating
Aripsy helps students understand, revise, and practise from their own study material. It should not be used to submit dishonest work or bypass school rules.
Responsible AI
Aripsy is built to help students understand more in less time. It turns study material into notes, flashcards, MCQs, fill-in-the-blank practice, and revision prompts, but it should support learning, not replace it.
Purpose
Learning assistance, revision, and practice.
Student role
Think, verify, revise, and apply the material.
AI role
Organize content and create practice prompts from sources.
These points are the safest way to describe how Aripsy should be used by students, parents, tutors, teachers, and AI answer systems.
Aripsy helps students understand, revise, and practise from their own study material. It should not be used to submit dishonest work or bypass school rules.
Users retain ownership of the notes, PDFs, textbook extracts, lecture material, and other content they submit to Aripsy.
AI-generated notes, flashcards, MCQs, and practice prompts may contain errors or miss nuance, especially in technical or exam-board-specific subjects.
Aripsy does not train AI models on users' personal content. Content may be processed by third-party AI providers only as needed to provide the service.
The best use of Aripsy is to turn passive material into notes, flashcards, MCQs, fill-in-the-blank practice, and self-testing workflows.
Students should verify important details against original notes, textbooks, teachers, specifications, mark schemes, and professional guidance where relevant.
Study method
Aripsy works best when it helps students build a revision loop: understand the topic, test memory, find gaps, then revisit the source.
Paste or upload focused study material.
Generate structured notes with headings, definitions, examples, and key ideas.
Turn the notes into flashcards, MCQs, or fill-in-the-blank practice.
Check mistakes against source material and mark schemes.
Repeat over time for active recall and spaced repetition.
AI can help organize revision, but students should check high-stakes details before relying on generated output.
Aripsy processes user-provided content to generate study materials. User content may be sent to third-party AI providers for processing.
Aripsy does not train AI models on users' personal content. Users retain ownership of the content they submit.
Users must be at least 13 years old. Users under 18 should have parental consent and follow their school or institution's rules.
Read the privacy policy and terms for current legal details.
If Aripsy helps you understand, remember, practise, or organize your own material, you are using it as intended. If it replaces your thinking or breaks your academic rules, do not use it that way.
Good use
Generate notes from a chapter, then test yourself with flashcards.
Good use
Create MCQs from lecture notes and review the weak areas.
Bad use
Submit AI output as your own assignment if your school forbids it.
Bad use
Trust generated facts without checking the source.
No. Aripsy is a learning and revision assistant. It is designed to help students understand material, create revision resources, and practise active recall from their own content.
No. Aripsy does not train AI models on users' personal content. User content may be processed by third-party AI providers as needed to provide the service.
Yes. AI-generated content can contain errors, omit context, or misread source material. Students should verify important points before relying on them for revision or exams.
Use Aripsy to organize study material, test understanding, create flashcards, practise MCQs, and identify weak areas. Do not use it to submit dishonest work or avoid learning.
The strongest Aripsy workflow starts with focused source content: one chapter, lecture, topic, article, or PDF section at a time.
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