YELP · CIK 0001345016
What Yelp Inc. told the SEC could break it.
1 self-disclosed vulnerability, pulled from its own filings — each in the company’s words, with the source. This is the risk register almost nobody reads.
A limited set so far — we surface every cited disclosure we’ve extracted for YELP. More may follow as additional filings are processed.
In its own words
What could break it.
Regulatory & policy
- Internet-platform regulation central to the business — privacy, data protection, data security, and user-generated-content (Section 230 / content-liability) laws in the U.S. and abroadmedium
Yelp's product is built on user-generated reviews and the sale of targeted advertising against consumer engagement, so internet-platform regulation strikes at the core of its model. It states it is subject to a variety of U.S. and foreign laws involving matters central to its business — privacy, data protection, data security, user-generated content and consumer protection. Changes to content-liability protections (e.g., Section 230 reform), tightening privacy regimes (CCPA/GDPR and successors) that constrain ad targeting, or new consumer-protection rules on reviews/ads could raise compliance costs and impair its advertising and content model. A business-central regulatory exposure.
“we are subject to a variety of laws and regulations in the United States and abroad that involve matters central to our business, including laws regarding privacy, data protection, data security, user-generated content”
SEC filing →As of 2026
The hidden graph
Who it depends on, and who depends on it.
Relationships surfaced from filings — including ones disclosed by the other side, which is how the non-obvious ones come to light.
Its suppliers
“We rely on a number of providers of infrastructure and software services, including AWS.”
Cited →
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