Per Read's Terms of Service, users are not allowed to share their account credentials with others. And practically speaking, Read's product is designed around the assumption that each account belongs to a single person. To that end, there are some key limitations that would make sharing an account problematic:
- Read uses your connected calendars to automatically join and record your meetings. You can only connect one account for each of the calendar integrations (Google, Outlook, and Zoom).
- Read matches the participants in a meeting back to their Read account (if they have one) in order to compute things like coaching metrics and ownership of action items. If you have multiple different people trying to use the same Read account, we won't be able to resolve their identities back to the account, causing you to miss out on things like coaching and action item tracking.
- Features like For You, Coaching, and Meeting Policy all assume a single person is using the account. If you have multiple people are sharing a single account, then the data and recommendations will get muddled and less useful.
Read reserves the right to rate limit accounts that are found to be violating the Terms of Service.