Website Terms & Conditions Of Use
1. Introduction
1.1 These terms and conditions shall govern your use of our website.
1.2 By using our website, you accept these terms and conditions in full; accordingly,
if you disagree with these terms and conditions or any part of these terms and conditions,
you must not use our website.
1.3 If you register with our website, submit any material to our website or use
any of our website services, we will ask you to expressly agree to these terms and conditions.
1.4 You must be at least 18 years of age to use our website; by using our website or
agreeing to these terms and conditions, you warrant and represent to us that you are
at least 18 years of age.
2. Credit
2.1 This document was created using a template from Docular
(https://seqlegal.com/free-legal-documents/website-terms-and-conditions).
3. Copyright notice
3.1 Copyright(c) Sonanti Marketing 2025
3.2 Subject tothe express provisions of these terms and conditions:
(a) we, together with our licensors, own and control all the copyright and other
intellectual property rights in our website and the material on our
website; and
(b) all the copyright and other intellectual property rights in our website and
the material on our website are reserved.
4. Permission to use website
4.1 You may:
(a) view pages from our website in a web browser;
(b) download pages from our website for caching in a web browser;
(c) print pages from our website for your own personal and non-commercial use,
providing that such printing is not systematic or excessive;
(d) stream audio and video files from our website using the media player on our
website; and
(e) use our website services by means of a web browser, subject to the other
provisions of these terms and conditions.
4.2 Except as expressly permitted by Section 4.1 or the other provisions of these
terms and conditions, you must not download any material from our
website or save any such material to your computer.
4.3 You may only use our website for your own personal and business purposes; you must
not use our website for any other purposes.
4.4 Except as expressly permitted by these terms and conditions, you must not edit
or otherwise modify any material on our website.
4.5 Unless you own or control the relevant rights in the material, you must not:
(a) republish material from our website (including republication on another
website);
(b) sell, rent or sub-license material from our website;
(c) show any material from our website in public;
(d) exploit material from our website for a commercial purpose; or
(e) redistribute material from our website.
4.6 Notwithstanding Section 4.5, you may redistribute our newsletter in print and
electronic form to any person.
4.7 We reserve the right to suspend or restrict access to our website, to areas of
our website and/or to functionality upon our website. We may, for
example, suspend access to the website. You must not circumvent or
bypass, or attempt to circumvent or bypass, any access restriction
measures on the website.
5. Misuse of website
5.1 You must not:
(a) use our website in any way or take any action that causes, or may cause,
damage to the website or impairment of the performance, availability,
accessibility, integrity or security of the website;
(b) use our website in any way that is unlawful, illegal, fraudulent or harmful,
or in connection with any unlawful, illegal, fraudulent or harmful
purpose or activity;
(c) hack or otherwise tamper with our website;
(d) probe, scan or test the vulnerability of our website without our permission;
(e) circumvent any authentication or security systems or processes on or relating to
our website;
(f) use our website to copy, store, host, transmit, send, use, publish or
distribute any material which consists of (or is linked to) any spyware,
computer virus, Trojan horse, worm, keystroke logger,rootkit or
other malicious computer software;
(g) impose an unreasonably large load on our website resources (including
bandwidth, storage capacity and processing capacity);
(h) decrypt or decipher any communications sent by or to our website without our
permission;
(i) conduct any systematic or automated data collection activities (including without
limitation scraping, data mining, data extraction and data harvesting) on or in relation
to our website without our express written consent;
(j) access or otherwise interact with our website using any robot, spider or other
automated means, except for the purpose of search engine indexing;
(k) use our website except by means of our public interfaces;
(l) violate the directives set out in the robots.txt file for our website;
(m) use data collected from our website for any direct marketing activity including without
limitation email marketing, SMS marketing, telemarketing and direct mailing; or
(n) do anything that interferes with the normal use of our website.
5.2 You must not use data collected from our website to contact individuals, companies
or other persons or entities.
5.3 You must ensure that all the information you supply to us through our website,
or in relation to our website, is true, accurate, current, complete
and non-misleading.
6. Registration and accounts
6.1 To be eligible for an account on our website under this Section 6, you must
be resident or situated in the United Kingdom.
6.2 You may register for an account with our website by completing and submitting
the account registration form on our website, and clicking on the verification link in
the email that the website will send to you.
6.3 You must not allow any other person to use your account to access the website.
6.4 You must notify us in writing immediately if you become aware of any
unauthorised use of your account.
6.5 You must not use any other person's account to access the website, unless you have
that person's express permission to do so.
7. User login details
7.1 If you register for an account with our website, we will provide you with or
you will be asked to choose a user ID and password.
7.2 Your user ID must not be liable to mislead and must comply with the content rules
set out in Section 10; you must not use your account or user ID for or in connection with
the impersonation of any person.
7.3 You must keep your password confidential.
7.4 You must notify us in writing immediately if you become aware of any
disclosure of your password.
7.5 You are responsible for any activity on our website arising out of any
failure to keep your password confidential, and may be held liable
for any losses arising out of such a failure.
8. Cancellation and suspension of account
8.1 We may:
(a) suspend your account;
(b) cancel your account; and/or
(c) edit your account details, at any time in our sole discretion with or without notice to you.
8.2 We will usually cancel an account if it remains unused for a continuous period of 18 months.
8.3 You may cancel your account on our website using your account control panel on the website.
9. Our rights to use your content
9.1 In these terms and conditions, "your content" means all works and
materials (including without limitation text, graphics, images, audio
material, video material, audio-visual material, scripts, software
and files) that you submit to us or our website for storage or
publication on, processing by, or transmission via, our website.
9.2 You grant to us a worldwide, irrevocable, non-exclusive, royalty-free licence to
use, reproduce, store, adapt, publish, translate and distribute your content in any
existing or future media
9.3 You grant to us the right to sub-license the rights licensed under Section 9.2.
9.4 You grant to us the right to bring an action for infringement of the rights
licensed under Section 9.2.
9.5 You hereby waive all your moral rights in your content to the maximum extent
permitted by applicable law; and you warrant and represent that all other moral rights
in your content have been waived to the maximum extent permitted by applicable law.
9.6 You may edit your content to the extent permitted using the editing functionality
made available on our website.
9.7 Without prejudice to our other rights under these terms and conditions, if
you breach any provision of these terms and conditions in any way, or if we reasonably
suspect that you have breached these terms and conditions in any way, we may delete,
unpublish or edit any or all of your content.
10. Rules about your content
10.1 You warrant and represent that your content will comply with these terms and
conditions.
10.2 Your content must not be illegal or unlawful, must not infringe any person's legal rights,
and must not be capable of giving rise to legal action against any person (in each case in any
jurisdiction and under any applicable law).
10.3 Your content, and the use of your content by us in accordance with these terms and conditions,
must not:
(a) be libellous or maliciously false;
(b) be obscene or indecent;
(c) infringe any copyright, moral right, database right, trade mark right, design
right, right in passing off or other intellectual property right;
(d) infringe any right of confidence, right of privacy or right under data protection
legislation;
(e) constitute negligent advice or contain any negligent statement;
(f) constitute an incitement to commit a crime, instructions for the commission of a
crime or the promotion of criminal activity;
(g) be in contempt of any court or in breach of any court order;
(h) be in breach of racial or religious hatred or discrimination legislation;
(i) be blasphemous;
(j) be in breach of official secrets legislation;
(k) be in breach of any contractual obligation owed to any person;
(l) depict violence in an explicit, graphic or gratuitous manner;
(m) be pornographic, lewd, suggestive or sexually explicit;
(n) be untrue, false, inaccurate or misleading;
(o) consist of or contain any instructions, advice or other information which may be
acted upon and could, if acted upon, cause illness, injury or death, or any other loss or damage;
(p) constitute spam;
(q) be offensive, deceptive, fraudulent, threatening, abusive, harassing, anti-social, menacing, hateful,
discriminatory or inflammatory; or
(r) cause annoyance, inconvenience or needless anxiety to any person.
11. Limited warranties
11.1 We do not warrant or represent:
(a) the completeness or accuracy of the information published on our website;
(b) that the material on the website is up to date;
(c) that the website will operate without fault; or
(d) that the website or any service on the website will remain available.
11.2 We reserve the right to discontinue or alter any or all of our website services,
and to stop publishing our website, at any time in our sole discretion without notice
or explanation; and save to the extent expressly provided otherwise in these terms
and conditions, you will not be entitled to any compensation or other payment upon
the discontinuance or alteration of any website services, or if we stop publishing the website.
11.3 To the maximum extent permitted by applicable law and subject to Section
12.1, we exclude all representations and warranties relating to the
subject matter of these terms and conditions, our website and the use
of our website.
12. Limitations and exclusions of liability
12.1 Nothing in these terms and conditions will:
(a) limit or exclude any liability for death or personal injury resulting from negligence;
(b) limit or exclude any liability for fraud or fraudulent misrepresentation;
(c) limit any liabilities in any way that is not permitted under applicable law; or
(d) exclude any liabilities that may not be excluded under applicable law.
12.2 The limitations and exclusions of liability set out in this Section 12 and elsewhere in these terms and conditions:
(a) are subject to Section 12.1; and
(b) govern all liabilities arising under these terms and conditions or relating to the subject matter of these
terms and conditions, including liabilities arising in contract, in tort (including negligence) and for breach
of statutory duty, except to the extent expressly provided otherwise in these terms and conditions.
12.3 To the extent that our website and the information and services on our website are provided free of charge,
we will not be liable for any loss or damage of any nature.
12.4 We will not be liable to you in respect of any losses arising out of any event or events beyond our reasonable control.
12.5 We will not be liable to you in respect of any business losses, including (without limitation) loss of or damage to profits,
income, revenue, use, production, anticipated savings, business, contracts, commercial opportunities or goodwill.
12.6 We will not be liable to you in respect of any loss or corruption of any data, database or software.
12.7 We will not be liable to you in respect of any special, indirect or consequential loss or damage.
12.8 You accept that we have an interest in limiting the personal liability of our officers and employees and, having regard
to that interest, you acknowledge that we are a limited liability entity; you agree that you will not bring any claim
personally against our officers or employees in respect of any losses you suffer in connection with the website or
these terms and conditions (this will not, of course, limit or exclude the liability of the limited liability entity itself
for the acts and omissions of our officers and employees).
13. Breaches of these terms and conditions
13.1 Without prejudice to our other rights under these terms and conditions, if you breach these terms and
conditions in any way, or if we reasonably suspect that you have breached these terms and conditions in any way,
we may:
(a) send you one or more formal warnings;
(b) temporarily suspend your access to our website;
(c) permanently prohibit you from accessing our website;
(d) block computers using your IP address from accessing our website;
(e) contact any or all of your internet service providers and request that they block
your access to our website;
(f) commence legal action against you, whether for breach of contract or
otherwise; and/or
(g) suspend or delete your account on our website.
13.2 Where we suspend or prohibit or block your access to our website or a part of our website,
you must not take any action to circumvent such suspension or prohibition or blocking
(including without limitation creating and/or using a different account).
14. Variation
14.1 We may revise these terms and conditions from time to time.
14.2 The revised terms and conditions shall apply to the use of our website from the date of publication
of the revised terms and conditions on the website, and you hereby waive any right you may otherwise
have to be notified of, or to consent to, revisions of these terms and conditions.
14.3 If you have given your express agreement to these terms and conditions, we will ask for your express agreement
to any revision of these terms and conditions; and if you do not give your express agreement to the revised terms
and conditions within such period as we may specify, we will disable or delete your account on the website,
and you must stop using the website.
15. Assignment
15.1 You hereby agree that we may assign, transfer, sub-contract or otherwise deal with our rights and/or obligations
under these terms and conditions.
15.2 You may not without our prior written consent assign, transfer, sub-contract or otherwise deal with any of your rights
and/or obligations under these terms and conditions.
16. Severability
16.1 If a provision of these terms and conditions is determined by any court or other competent authority to be
unlawful and/or unenforceable, the other provisions will continue in effect.
16.2 If any unlawful and/or unenforceable provision of these terms and conditions would be lawful or enforceable
if part of it were deleted, that part will be deemed to be deleted, and the rest of the provision will continue in effect.
17. Third party rights
17.1 A contract under these terms and conditions is for our benefit and your benefit, and is not intended to benefit
or be enforceable by any third party.
17.2 The exercise of the parties' rights under a contract under these terms not subject to the consent of any third party.
18. Entire agreement
18.1 Subject to Section 12.1, these terms and conditions[, together with our privacy and cookies policy, shall constitute the
entire agreement between you and us in relation to your use of our website and shall supersede all previous agreements
between you and us in relation to your use of our website.
19. Law and jurisdiction
19.1 These terms and conditions shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the Law of England and Wales.
19.2 Any disputes relating to these terms and conditions shall be subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the courts of England and Wales.
20. Our details
20.1 This
website is owned and operated by Sonanti Marketing
20.4 You can
contact us by using our website contact form. Click
here
Free
website terms and conditions: drafting notes
This is a free version of our standard website terms and
conditions document. It is identical to that document, save that this
version includes an SEQ legal credit.
In addition to the provisions that would typically be included in
any set of website terms and conditions, this document includes
provisions covering user accounts and user-generated content
(although the latter are not as detailed as in some of our more
sophisticated website terms and conditions documents).
If your website does not feature user accounts or interactive
features, you may wish to consider our website disclaimer document
instead of these terms and conditions.
Section 1: Introduction
Sometimes, there will be a contractual relationship between a
website operator and a website user; other times, there will not.
Where there is no contractual relationship, legal notices can
still have legal effects. For instance, licences of intellectual
property rights and disclaimers of liability may be legally effective
where there is no contract. Moreover, statutory and regulatory
disclosure obligations can be fulfilled by means of legal notices
irrespective of whether a contract subsists.
If however an operator is selling something to users, or wants to
impose positive obligations upon users, or wants to institute
prohibitions that are extraneous to any licence of intellectual
property rights, a contractual relationship will usually be
necessary.
To help ensure that a terms and conditions document is properly
incorporated into a contract, the document should be expressly
accepted by the user.
Common methods of gaining acceptance include: (a) incorporating a
statement next to a submit button providing that, by pressing the
submit button, the user agrees to the document; (b) using a checkbox
to gain consent, and blocking registration form submission if the
checkbox has not been checked; and (c) requiring users to scroll
through the document, and click an "agree" button after
doing so.
In all cases, the document should be available to users at the
point of acceptance, either on screen or via a hyperlink. If a
contractual document includes unusual and/or potentially
controversial provisions, it may be necessary to bring these to the
particular attention of users.
In general, you should not ask users to affirm that they have
actually read a legal document - almost none will do so, and the
reading of the document is not a precondition to its incorporation
into the contract.
Section 1.2
Optional element.
The completed document should be easily accessible on the website,
with a link from every page.
Section 1.3
Optional element. Will all or any website users give their express
consent to the terms of this document?
Ideally, from a legal perspective, all users would be asked to
expressly agree to the terms of the document. However, in practice,
express consent is rarely sought from casual website visitors. On the
other hand, it is easy to obtain the express consent of users who
register with the website or submit any material to the website, eg
by clicking "I accept" on an electronic version of the
document. You should retain evidence of the acceptance of the
document terms by each such user.
Section 1.4
Optional element. Are there any age restrictions on the use of the
website?
The use of websites by minors can be legally problematic. There
are a number of different legal issues. For example, under English
law, contracts may be unenforceable against minors. Another issue
concerns data protection. The law of data protection imposes
additional burdens in relation to the processing of any personal data
of a minor and personal data provided by a minor. The effects of the
law of indecency may also depend upon whether a website is accessible
by minors. Obviously, the inclusion of a requirement in your terms
and conditions that minors refrain from using a website is no
guarantee that they will do so. Where your website is directed at, or
likely to be used by, minors, we recommend that you seek specialist
legal advice.
Section 2: Credit
Section: Free documents licensing warning
Optional element. Although you need to retain the credit, you
should remove the inline copyright warning from this document before
use.
Section 3: Copyright notice
A copyright notice is an assertion of ownership.
Copyright notices usually take the form specified in Article 3(1)
of the Universal Copyright Convention (although the UCC itself is now
of very limited significance):
"Any Contracting State which, under its domestic law,
requires as a condition of copyright, compliance with formalities
such as deposit, registration, notice, notarial certificates, payment
of fees or manufacture or publication in that Contracting State,
shall regard these requirements as satisfied with respect to all
works protected in accordance with this Convention and first
published outside its territory and the author of which is not one of
its nationals, if from the time of the first publication all the
copies of the work published with the authority of the author or
other copyright proprietor bear the symbol © accompanied by the name
of the copyright proprietor and the year of first publication placed
in such manner and location as to give reasonable notice of claim of
copyright."
It will be rare for a website owner to be the sole proprietor of
all the copyright in a website. For example, the software code used
to run the website may belong to another person. For this reason, the
notice here refers also to licensors.
Section 3.1
Section 4: Permission to use website
Every website is a compendium of copyright-protected works. These
may include literary works, (website text, HTML, CSS and software
code), graphic works (photographs and illustrations), databases,
sound recordings and films.
The most fundamental principle of copyright law is that a person
may not copy a protected work without permission. Using a website
involves copying some or all of the works comprised in the website.
Accordingly, a user needs permission to use a website. A "licence"
is just such a permission.
In most if not all cases, by publishing a website a person will be
granting an implied licence to website visitors to copy of the
website. The problem with an implied licence is that the scope of the
licence is inherently uncertain. Is the visitor permitted to download
the entire website? Is the visitor permitted to reproduce elements of
the website elsewhere?
Because of this uncertainty, most publishers will include an
express licence setting out exactly what visitors are permitted to do
in relation to a website and, just as important, what they are not
permitted to do.
The scope of the licence will vary. In editing these provisions,
consider carefully exactly what your users should be allowed to do
with the website and material on the website.
Section 4.1
Section 4.2
Optional element.
Section 4.3
Optional element.
Section 4.4
Optional element.
Section 4.6
Optional element. Are users permitted to redistribute any specific
content from the website (eg newsletters)?
Section 5: Misuse of website
Section 5.1
Section 5.2
Optional element. Should the use of data collected from the
website to contact people and businesses be prohibited?
Section 5.3
Optional element.
Section 6: Registration and accounts
Section 6.1
Optional element. Do any eligibility criteria apply to account
registration?
Section 6.2
Section 6.3
Optional element. Will users be permitted to share their accounts?
Section 6.4
Optional element.
Section 6.5
Optional element.
Section 7: User login details
Section 7.1
Section 7.2
Optional element.
Section 7.3
Optional element.
Section 7.4
Optional element.
Section 7.5
Optional element.
Section 8: Cancellation and suspension of account
Ensure that the account handling provisions in these terms
and conditions are consistent with your privacy policy,
including the personal data retention and deletion provisions in that
policy.
Section 8.1
Section 8.2
Optional element.
Section 8.3
Section 9: Our rights to use your content
Section 9.1
Section 9.2
Section 9.4
Optional element. Should the website operator be granted a right
to bring proceedings in respect of third party infringements?
Section 9.5
Optional element. Should users be asked to waive their moral
rights (such as the right of paternity and the right to object to
derogatory treatment) in the content they submit to the website?
Section 9.6
Optional element. Can users edit their own content after it has
been posted to the website?
Section 10: Rules about your content
Section 10.2
This very general prohibition against unlawful user content may be
supplemented by rules relating to specific kinds of illegality, as
well as prohibitions upon lawful but undesirable content.
Section 10.3
Optional element.
Section 11: Limited warranties
Section 11.1
Optional element.
Section 11.2
Optional element.
Section 12: Limitations and exclusions of liability
Contractual limitations and exclusions of liability are regulated
and controlled by law, and the courts may rule that particular
limitations and exclusions of liability in contracts are
unenforceable.
The courts are particularly likely to intervene where a party is
seeking to rely on a limitation or exclusion of liability in its
standard terms and conditions, but will also sometimes intervene
where a term has been individually negotiated. The courts may be
more likely to rule that provisions excluding liability, as opposed
to those merely limiting liability, are unenforceable. If there
is a risk that any particular limitation or exclusion of liability
will be found to be unenforceable by the courts, that provision
should be drafted as an independent term, and be numbered separately
from the other provisions. It may improve the chances of a
limitation or exclusion of liability being found to be enforceable if
the party seeking to rely upon it specifically drew it to the
attention of the other party before the contract was entered into.
Exclusions and limitations of liability in UK contracts are
primarily regulated by the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977
("UCTA"). Contracts regulated by UCTA cannot exclude
or restrict a party's liability for death or personal injury
resulting from negligence (Section 2(1), UCTA). Except insofar
as the relevant term satisfies the requirements of reasonableness,
such contracts cannot exclude or restrict liability: (i) for
negligence (which includes a breach of an express or implied
contractual obligation to take reasonable care or exercise reasonable
skill) (Section 2(2), UCTA); or (ii) for misrepresentation (Section
3, Misrepresentation Act 1967). In addition, if a contract is
regulated by UCTA, and one of the parties is dealing on the other's
written standard terms of business, then except insofar as the
relevant contractual term satisfies the requirements of
reasonableness the other party cannot: (i) exclude or restrict his
liability in respect of a breach of contract; or (ii) claim to be
entitled to render a contractual performance substantially different
from that which was reasonably expected of him; or (iii) claim to be
entitled, in respect of the whole or any part of his contractual
obligation, to render no contractual performance at all (see Section
3, UCTA). UCTA includes various other restrictions, particularly
in the case of contracts for the sale of goods and contracts under
which possession or ownership of goods passes.
If you wish to try to limit/exclude for liability in respect of
reckless, deliberate, personal and/or repudiatory breaches of
contract, you may wish to specify this in relation to the relevant
provision (for example, using the following wording: "The
limitations and exclusions of liability in this Clause [number] will
apply whether or not the liability in question arises out of any
reckless, deliberate, personal and/or repudiatory conduct or breach
of contract").
Somewhat different rules apply to limitations of liability in
contracts with consumers, and these provisions should not be used in
relation to such contracts.
These guidance notes provide a very incomplete and basic overview
of a complex subject. Accordingly, you should take legal advice if
you may wish to rely upon a limitation or exclusion of liability.
Section 12.1
Do not delete this provision (except upon legal advice). Without
this provision, the specific limitations and exclusions of liability
in the document are more likely to be unenforceable.
Section 12.3
Optional element. Do you want to attempt to exclude all liability
for free services and information?
This sort of exclusion is quite common, but unlikely to be
enforceable in court.
Section 12.5
Optional element.
Section 12.6
Optional element.
Section 12.7
Optional element.
Section 12.8
Optional element. If the website operator is a limited liability
entity (eg a limited company), do you want to expressly exclude
liability on the part of officers and employees?
Section 13: Breaches of these terms and conditions
Section 13.1
Section 13.2
Optional element.
Section 14: Variation
Changes to legal documents published on a website will not
generally be retrospectively effective, and variations without notice
to and/or consent from relevant users may be ineffective.
Section 14.2
Section 14.3
Optional element. Will registered users be required to consent to
variations?
Section 17: Third party rights
Optional element.
This provision is designed to exclude any rights a third party may
have under the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999.
Section 18: Entire agreement
Section 18.1
Section 19: Law and jurisdiction
The questions of which law governs a document and where disputes
relating to the document may be litigated are two distinct questions.
Section 19.1
This document has been drafted to comply with English law, and the
governing law provision should not be changed without obtaining
expert advice from a lawyer qualified in the appropriate
jurisdiction. In some circumstances the courts will apply provisions
of their local law, such as local competition law or consumer
protection law, irrespective of a choice of law clause.
Section 19.2
In some circumstances your jurisdiction clause may be overridden
by the courts.
Section 20: Statutory and regulatory disclosures
Do the Electronic Commerce (EC Directive) Regulations 2002 apply
to the website or is the website operator registered for VAT?
This section can be deleted where website operator is not
registered for VAT and the Electronic Commerce (EC Directive)
Regulations 2002 do not apply. Generally, those Regulations will
apply unless a website is entirely non-commercial, ie where a website
does not offer any goods or services and does not involve any
remuneration (which includes remuneration for carrying AdSense or
other advertising).
Section 20.1
Optional element. Is the website operator registered in a trade or
similar register that is available to the public?
The Electronic Commerce (EC Directive) Regulations 2002 provide
that if you are "registered in a trade or similar register
available to the public", you must provide "details of the
register in which the service provider is entered and his
registration number, or equivalent means of identification in that
register".
Section 20.2
Optional element. Is the website operator subject to an
authorisation scheme (eg under financial services legislation)?
The Electronic Commerce (EC Directive) Regulations 2002 provide
that "where the provision of the service is subject to an
authorisation scheme" you must provide "the particulars of
the relevant supervisory authority".
Section 20.3
Optional element. Is the service provider a member of a regulated
profession (eg solicitors)?
The Electronic Commerce (EC Directive) Regulations 2002 provide
that if "the service provider exercises a regulated profession",
it must provide "(i) the details of any professional body or
similar institution with which the service provider is registered;
(ii) his professional title and the member State where that title has
been granted; (iii) a reference to the professional rules applicable
to the service provider in the member State of establishment and the
means to access them".
Section 20.4
Optional element. Does the website operator subscribe to any codes
of conduct?
The Electronic Commerce (EC Directive) Regulations 2002 provide
that "a service provider shall indicate which relevant codes of
conduct he subscribes to and give information on how those codes can
be consulted electronically".
Section 20.5
Optional element. Is the website operator registered for VAT?
Section 21: Our details
Optional element.
The provisions here reflect a mixture of EU law and UK law
requirements relating to contact information.
All services covered by the Ecommerce Directive (which was
implemented in the UK through the Electronic Commerce (EC Directive)
Regulations 2002) must provide a name, a geographic address (not a
P.O. Box number) and an email address.
Under distinct UK legislation, UK companies must provide their
corporate names, their registration numbers, their place of
registration and their registered office address on their websites
(although not necessarily in this document). Sole traders and
partnerships that carry on a business in the UK under a "business
name" (i.e. a name which is not the name of the trader/names of
the partners or certain other specified classes of name) must also
make certain additional disclosures: (a) in the case of a sole
trader, the individual's name; (b) in the case of a partnership, the
name of each member of the partnership; and (c) in either case, in
relation to each person named, an address in the UK at which service
of any document relating in any way to the business will be
effective. All operators covered by the Provision of Services
Regulations 2009 must also provide a telephone number.
Section 21.1
Section 21.2
Optional element. Is the relevant person a company?
Section 21.3
Optional element.
Section 21.4
Optional element.
Free website terms and conditions: cover
1. This template legal document was produced and published by Docular Limited.
2. We control the copyright in this template, and you may only use this template in accordance with the licensing provisions in our terms and conditions. Those licensing provisions include an obligation to retain the attribution / credit incorporated into the template.
3. You will need to edit this template before use. Guidance notes to help you do so are set out at the end of the template. During the editing process, you should delete those guidance notes and this cover sheet. Square brackets in the body of the document indicate areas that require editorial attention. "ORs" in the body of the document indicate alternative provisions. By the end of the editing process, there should be no square brackets left in the body of the document, and only one alternative from each set of alternatives should remain. Elements may be specified as optional in the accompanying notes, but that does not mean that they are in all cases removable. Depending upon the circumstances, an optional element may be: (i) required by law; or (ii) necessary to ensure that the document is internally consistent.
4. If you have any doubts about the editing or use of this template, you should seek professional legal advice.
5. You can request a quote for legal services (including the adaptation or review of a legal document produced from this template) using this form: https://docular.net/pages/contact.
Terms and conditions of use
1. Introduction
1.1 These terms and conditions shall govern your use of our website.
1.2 By using our website, you accept these terms and conditions in full; accordingly, if you disagree with these terms and conditions or any part of these terms and conditions, you must not use our website.
1.3 If you register with our website, submit any material to our website or use any of our website services, we will ask you to expressly agree to these terms and conditions.
1.4 You must be at least 18 years of age to use our website; by using our website or agreeing to these terms and conditions, you warrant and represent to us that you are at least 18 years of age.
2. Credit
2.1 This document was created using a template from Docular (https://seqlegal.com/free-legal-documents/website-terms-and-conditions).
3. Copyright notice
3.1 Copyright (c) Sonanti Marketing 2025
3.2 Subject to the express provisions of these terms and conditions:
(a) we, together with our licensors, own and control all the copyright and other intellectual property rights in our website and the material on our website; and
(b) all the copyright and other intellectual property rights in our website and the material on our website are reserved.
4. Permission to use website
4.1 You may:
(a) view pages from our website in a web browser;
(b) download pages from our website for caching in a web browser;
(c) print pages from our website for your own personal and non-commercial use, providing that such printing is not systematic or excessive];
(d) stream audio and video files from our website using the media player on our website; and
(e) use our website services by means of a web browser, subject to the other provisions of these terms and conditions.
4.2 Except as expressly permitted by Section 4.1 or the other provisions of these terms and conditions, you must not download any material from our website or save any such material to your computer.
4.3 You may only use our website for your own personal and business purposes; you must not use our website for any other purposes.
4.4 Except as expressly permitted by these terms and conditions, you must not edit or otherwise modify any material on our website.
4.5 Unless you own or control the relevant rights in the material, you must not:
(a) republish material from our website (including republication on another website);
(b) sell, rent or sub-license material from our website;
(c) show any material from our website in public;
(d) exploit material from our website for a commercial purpose; or
(e) redistribute material from our website.
4.6 Notwithstanding Section 4.5, you may redistribute our newsletter in print and electronic form to any person.
4.7 We reserve the right to suspend or restrict access to our website, to areas of our website and/or to functionality upon our website. We may, for example, suspend access to the website. You must not circumvent or bypass, or attempt to circumvent or bypass, any access restriction measures on the website.
5. Misuse of website
5.1 You must not:
(a) use our website in any way or take any action that causes, or may cause, damage to the website or impairment of the performance, availability, accessibility, integrity or security of the website;
(b) use our website in any way that is unlawful, illegal, fraudulent or harmful, or in connection with any unlawful, illegal, fraudulent or harmful purpose or activity;
(c) hack or otherwise tamper with our website;
(d) probe, scan or test the vulnerability of our website without our permission;
(e) circumvent any authentication or security systems or processes on or relating to our website;
(f) use our website to copy, store, host, transmit, send, use, publish or distribute any material which consists of (or is linked to) any spyware, computer virus, Trojan horse, worm, keystroke logger, rootkit or other malicious computer software;
(g) impose an unreasonably large load on our website resources (including bandwidth, storage capacity and processing capacity);
(h) decrypt or decipher any communications sent by or to our website without our permission;
(i) conduct any systematic or automated data collection activities (including without limitation scraping, data mining, data extraction and data harvesting) on or in relation to our website without our express written consent;
(j) access or otherwise interact with our website using any robot, spider or other automated means[, except for the purpose of search engine indexing;
(k) use our website except by means of our public interfaces;
(l) violate the directives set out in the robots.txt file for our website;
(m) use data collected from our website for any direct marketing activity (including without limitation email marketing, SMS marketing, telemarketing and direct mailing); or
(n) do anything that interferes with the normal use of our website.
5.2 You must not use data collected from our website to contact individuals, companies or other persons or entities.
5.3 You must ensure that all the information you supply to us through our website, or in relation to our website, is true, accurate, current, complete and non-misleading.
6. Registration and accounts
6.1 To be eligible for an account on our website under this Section 6, you must [be resident or situated in the United Kingdom].
6.2 You may register for an account with our website by completing and submitting the account registration form on our website, and clicking on the verification link in the email that the website will send to you.
6.3 You must not allow any other person to use your account to access the website.
6.4 You must notify us in writing immediately if you become aware of any unauthorised use of your account.
6.5 You must not use any other person's account to access the website, unless you have that person's express permission to do so.
7. User login details
7.1 If you register for an account with our website, we will provide you with or you will be asked to choose a user ID and password.
7.2 Your user ID must not be liable to mislead and must comply with the content rules set out in Section 10; you must not use your account or user ID for or in connection with the impersonation of any person.
7.3 You must keep your password confidential.
7.4 You must notify us in writing immediately if you become aware of any disclosure of your password.
7.5 You are responsible for any activity on our website arising out of any failure to keep your password confidential, and may be held liable for any losses arising out of such a failure.
8. Cancellation and suspension of account
8.1 We may:
(a) suspend your account;
(b) cancel your account; and/or
(c) edit your account details,
at any time in our sole discretion with or without notice to you.
8.2 We will usually cancel an account if it remains unused for a continuous period of 18 months.
8.3 You may cancel your account on our website using your account control panel on the website.
9. Our rights to use your content
9.1 In these terms and conditions, "your content" means [all works and materials (including without limitation text, graphics, images, audio material, video material, audio-visual material, scripts, software and files) that you submit to us or our website for storage or publication on, processing by, or transmission via, our website].
9.2 You grant to us a worldwide, irrevocable, non-exclusive, royalty-free licence to use, reproduce, store, adapt, publish, translate and distribute your content in any existing or future media
9.3 You grant to us the right to sub-license the rights licensed under Section 9.2.
9.4 You grant to us the right to bring an action for infringement of the rights licensed under Section 9.2.
9.5 You hereby waive all your moral rights in your content to the maximum extent permitted by applicable law; and you warrant and represent that all other moral rights in your content have been waived to the maximum extent permitted by applicable law.
9.6 You may edit your content to the extent permitted using the editing functionality made available on our website.
9.7 Without prejudice to our other rights under these terms and conditions, if you breach any provision of these terms and conditions in any way, or if we reasonably suspect that you have breached these terms and conditions in any way, we may delete, unpublish or edit any or all of your content.
10. Rules about your content
10.1 You warrant and represent that your content will comply with these terms and conditions.
10.2 Your content must not be illegal or unlawful, must not infringe any person's legal rights, and must not be capable of giving rise to legal action against any person (in each case in any jurisdiction and under any applicable law).
10.3 Your content, and the use of your content by us in accordance with these terms and conditions, must not:
(a) be libellous or maliciously false;
(b) be obscene or indecent;
(c) infringe any copyright, moral right, database right, trade mark right, design right, right in passing off or other intellectual property right;
(d) infringe any right of confidence, right of privacy or right under data protection legislation;
(e) constitute negligent advice or contain any negligent statement;
(f) constitute an incitement to commit a crime, instructions for the commission of a crime or the promotion of criminal activity;
(g) be in contempt of any court or in breach of any court order;
(h) be in breach of racial or religious hatred or discrimination legislation;
(i) be blasphemous;
(j) be in breach of official secrets legislation;
(k) be in breach of any contractual obligation owed to any person;
(l) depict violence[ in an explicit, graphic or gratuitous manner;
(m) be pornographic, lewd, suggestive or sexually explicit;
(n) be untrue, false, inaccurate or misleading;
(o) consist of or contain any instructions, advice or other information which may be acted upon and could, if acted upon, cause illness, injury or death, or any other loss or damage;
(p) constitute spam;
(q) be offensive, deceptive, fraudulent, threatening, abusive, harassing, anti-social, menacing, hateful, discriminatory or inflammatory; or
(r) cause annoyance, inconvenience or needless anxiety to any person.
11. Limited warranties
11.1 We do not warrant or represent:
(a) the completeness or accuracy of the information published on our website;
(b) that the material on the website is up to date;
(c) that the website will operate without fault; or
(d) that the website or any service on the website will remain available.
11.2 We reserve the right to discontinue or alter any or all of our website services, and to stop publishing our website, at any time in our sole discretion without notice or explanation; and save to the extent expressly provided otherwise in these terms and conditions, you will not be entitled to any compensation or other payment upon the discontinuance or alteration of any website services, or if we stop publishing the website.
11.3 To the maximum extent permitted by applicable law and subject to Section 12.1, we exclude all representations and warranties relating to the subject matter of these terms and conditions, our website and the use of our website.
12. Limitations and exclusions of liability
12.1 Nothing in these terms and conditions will:
(a) limit or exclude any liability for death or personal injury resulting from negligence;
(b) limit or exclude any liability for fraud or fraudulent misrepresentation;
(c) limit any liabilities in any way that is not permitted under applicable law; or
(d) exclude any liabilities that may not be excluded under applicable law.
12.2 The limitations and exclusions of liability set out in this Section 12 and elsewhere in these terms and conditions:
(a) are subject to Section 12.1; and
(b) govern all liabilities arising under these terms and conditions or relating to the subject matter of these terms and conditions, including liabilities arising in contract, in tort (including negligence) and for breach of statutory duty, except to the extent expressly provided otherwise in these terms and conditions.
12.3 To the extent that our website and the information and services on our website are provided free of charge, we will not be liable for any loss or damage of any nature.
12.4 We will not be liable to you in respect of any losses arising out of any event or events beyond our reasonable control.
12.5 We will not be liable to you in respect of any business losses, including (without limitation) loss of or damage to profits, income, revenue, use, production, anticipated savings, business, contracts, commercial opportunities or goodwill.
12.6 We will not be liable to you in respect of any loss or corruption of any data, database or software.
12.7 We will not be liable to you in respect of any special, indirect or consequential loss or damage.
12.8 You accept that we have an interest in limiting the personal liability of our officers and employees and, having regard to that interest, you acknowledge that we are a limited liability entity; you agree that you will not bring any claim personally against our officers or employees in respect of any losses you suffer in connection with the website or these terms and conditions (this will not, of course, limit or exclude the liability of the limited liability entity itself for the acts and omissions of our officers and employees).
13. Breaches of these terms and conditions
13.1 Without prejudice to our other rights under these terms and conditions, if you breach these terms and conditions in any way, or if we reasonably suspect that you have breached these terms and conditions in any way, we may:
(a) send you one or more formal warnings;
(b) temporarily suspend your access to our website;
(c) permanently prohibit you from accessing our website;
(d) block computers using your IP address from accessing our website;
(e) contact any or all of your internet service providers and request that they block your access to our website;
(f) commence legal action against you, whether for breach of contract or otherwise; and/or
(g) suspend or delete your account on our website.
13.2 Where we suspend or prohibit or block your access to our website or a part of our website, you must not take any action to circumvent such suspension or prohibition or blocking (including without limitation creating and/or using a different account).
14. Variation
14.1 We may revise these terms and conditions from time to time.
14.2 The revised terms and conditions shall apply to the use of our website from the date of publication of the revised terms and conditions on the website, and you hereby waive any right you may otherwise have to be notified of, or to consent to, revisions of these terms and conditions.
14.3 If you have given your express agreement to these terms and conditions, we will ask for your express agreement to any revision of these terms and conditions; and if you do not give your express agreement to the revised terms and conditions within such period as we may specify, we will disable or delete your account on the website, and you must stop using the website.
15. Assignment
15.1 You hereby agree that we may assign, transfer, sub-contract or otherwise deal with our rights and/or obligations under these terms and conditions.
15.2 You may not without our prior written consent assign, transfer, sub-contract or otherwise deal with any of your rights and/or obligations under these terms and conditions.
16. Severability
16.1 If a provision of these terms and conditions is determined by any court or other competent authority to be unlawful and/or unenforceable, the other provisions will continue in effect.
16.2 If any unlawful and/or unenforceable provision of these terms and conditions would be lawful or enforceable if part of it were deleted, that part will be deemed to be deleted, and the rest of the provision will continue in effect.
17. Third party rights
17.1 A contract under these terms and conditions is for our benefit and your benefit, and is not intended to benefit or be enforceable by any third party.
17.2 The exercise of the parties' rights under a contract under these terms and conditions is not subject to the consent of any third party.
18. Entire agreement
18.1 Subject to Section 12.1, these terms and conditions[, together with [our privacy and cookies policy],] shall constitute the entire agreement between you and us in relation to your use of our website and shall supersede all previous agreements between you and us in relation to your use of our website.
19. Law and jurisdiction
19.1 These terms and conditions shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the Law of England and Wales.
19.2 Any disputes relating to these terms and conditions shall be subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the courts of England and Wales.
20. Our details
20.1 This website is owned and operated by Sonanti Marketing
20.4 You can contact us by using our website contact form. Click here
Free website terms and conditions: drafting notes
This is a free version of our standard website terms and conditions document. It is identical to that document, save that this version includes an SEQ legal credit.
In addition to the provisions that would typically be included in any set of website terms and conditions, this document includes provisions covering user accounts and user-generated content (although the latter are not as detailed as in some of our more sophisticated website terms and conditions documents).
If your website does not feature user accounts or interactive features, you may wish to consider our website disclaimer document instead of these terms and conditions.
Section 1: Introduction
Sometimes, there will be a contractual relationship between a website operator and a website user; other times, there will not.
Where there is no contractual relationship, legal notices can still have legal effects. For instance, licences of intellectual property rights and disclaimers of liability may be legally effective where there is no contract. Moreover, statutory and regulatory disclosure obligations can be fulfilled by means of legal notices irrespective of whether a contract subsists.
If however an operator is selling something to users, or wants to impose positive obligations upon users, or wants to institute prohibitions that are extraneous to any licence of intellectual property rights, a contractual relationship will usually be necessary.
To help ensure that a terms and conditions document is properly incorporated into a contract, the document should be expressly accepted by the user.
Common methods of gaining acceptance include: (a) incorporating a statement next to a submit button providing that, by pressing the submit button, the user agrees to the document; (b) using a checkbox to gain consent, and blocking registration form submission if the checkbox has not been checked; and (c) requiring users to scroll through the document, and click an "agree" button after doing so.
In all cases, the document should be available to users at the point of acceptance, either on screen or via a hyperlink. If a contractual document includes unusual and/or potentially controversial provisions, it may be necessary to bring these to the particular attention of users.
In general, you should not ask users to affirm that they have actually read a legal document - almost none will do so, and the reading of the document is not a precondition to its incorporation into the contract.
Section 1.2
Optional element.
The completed document should be easily accessible on the website, with a link from every page.
Section 1.3
Optional element. Will all or any website users give their express consent to the terms of this document?
Ideally, from a legal perspective, all users would be asked to expressly agree to the terms of the document. However, in practice, express consent is rarely sought from casual website visitors. On the other hand, it is easy to obtain the express consent of users who register with the website or submit any material to the website, eg by clicking "I accept" on an electronic version of the document. You should retain evidence of the acceptance of the document terms by each such user.
Section 1.4
Optional element. Are there any age restrictions on the use of the website?
The use of websites by minors can be legally problematic. There are a number of different legal issues. For example, under English law, contracts may be unenforceable against minors. Another issue concerns data protection. The law of data protection imposes additional burdens in relation to the processing of any personal data of a minor and personal data provided by a minor. The effects of the law of indecency may also depend upon whether a website is accessible by minors. Obviously, the inclusion of a requirement in your terms and conditions that minors refrain from using a website is no guarantee that they will do so. Where your website is directed at, or likely to be used by, minors, we recommend that you seek specialist legal advice.
Section 2: Credit
Section: Free documents licensing warning
Optional element. Although you need to retain the credit, you should remove the inline copyright warning from this document before use.
Section 3: Copyright notice
A copyright notice is an assertion of ownership.
Copyright notices usually take the form specified in Article 3(1) of the Universal Copyright Convention (although the UCC itself is now of very limited significance):
"Any Contracting State which, under its domestic law, requires as a condition of copyright, compliance with formalities such as deposit, registration, notice, notarial certificates, payment of fees or manufacture or publication in that Contracting State, shall regard these requirements as satisfied with respect to all works protected in accordance with this Convention and first published outside its territory and the author of which is not one of its nationals, if from the time of the first publication all the copies of the work published with the authority of the author or other copyright proprietor bear the symbol © accompanied by the name of the copyright proprietor and the year of first publication placed in such manner and location as to give reasonable notice of claim of copyright."
It will be rare for a website owner to be the sole proprietor of all the copyright in a website. For example, the software code used to run the website may belong to another person. For this reason, the notice here refers also to licensors.
Section 3.1
Section 4: Permission to use website
Every website is a compendium of copyright-protected works. These may include literary works, (website text, HTML, CSS and software code), graphic works (photographs and illustrations), databases, sound recordings and films.
The most fundamental principle of copyright law is that a person may not copy a protected work without permission. Using a website involves copying some or all of the works comprised in the website. Accordingly, a user needs permission to use a website. A "licence" is just such a permission.
In most if not all cases, by publishing a website a person will be granting an implied licence to website visitors to copy of the website. The problem with an implied licence is that the scope of the licence is inherently uncertain. Is the visitor permitted to download the entire website? Is the visitor permitted to reproduce elements of the website elsewhere?
Because of this uncertainty, most publishers will include an express licence setting out exactly what visitors are permitted to do in relation to a website and, just as important, what they are not permitted to do.
The scope of the licence will vary. In editing these provisions, consider carefully exactly what your users should be allowed to do with the website and material on the website.
Section 4.1
Section 4.2
Optional element.
Section 4.3
Optional element.
Section 4.4
Optional element.
Section 4.6
Optional element. Are users permitted to redistribute any specific content from the website (eg newsletters)?
Section 5: Misuse of website
Section 5.1
Section 5.2
Optional element. Should the use of data collected from the website to contact people and businesses be prohibited?
Section 5.3
Optional element.
Section 6: Registration and accounts
Section 6.1
Optional element. Do any eligibility criteria apply to account registration?
Section 6.2
Section 6.3
Optional element. Will users be permitted to share their accounts?
Section 6.4
Optional element.
Section 6.5
Optional element.
Section 7: User login details
Section 7.1
Section 7.2
Optional element.
Section 7.3
Optional element.
Section 7.4
Optional element.
Section 7.5
Optional element.
Section 8: Cancellation and suspension of account
Ensure that the account handling provisions in these terms and conditions are consistent with your privacy policy, including the personal data retention and deletion provisions in that policy.
Section 8.1
Section 8.2
Optional element.
Section 8.3
Section 9: Our rights to use your content
Section 9.1
Section 9.2
Section 9.4
Optional element. Should the website operator be granted a right to bring proceedings in respect of third party infringements?
Section 9.5
Optional element. Should users be asked to waive their moral rights (such as the right of paternity and the right to object to derogatory treatment) in the content they submit to the website?
Section 9.6
Optional element. Can users edit their own content after it has been posted to the website?
Section 10: Rules about your content
Section 10.2
This very general prohibition against unlawful user content may be supplemented by rules relating to specific kinds of illegality, as well as prohibitions upon lawful but undesirable content.
Section 10.3
Optional element.
Section 11: Limited warranties
Section 11.1
Optional element.
Section 11.2
Optional element.
Section 12: Limitations and exclusions of liability
Contractual limitations and exclusions of liability are regulated and controlled by law, and the courts may rule that particular limitations and exclusions of liability in contracts are unenforceable.
The courts are particularly likely to intervene where a party is seeking to rely on a limitation or exclusion of liability in its standard terms and conditions, but will also sometimes intervene where a term has been individually negotiated. The courts may be more likely to rule that provisions excluding liability, as opposed to those merely limiting liability, are unenforceable. If there is a risk that any particular limitation or exclusion of liability will be found to be unenforceable by the courts, that provision should be drafted as an independent term, and be numbered separately from the other provisions. It may improve the chances of a limitation or exclusion of liability being found to be enforceable if the party seeking to rely upon it specifically drew it to the attention of the other party before the contract was entered into.
Exclusions and limitations of liability in UK contracts are primarily regulated by the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 ("UCTA"). Contracts regulated by UCTA cannot exclude or restrict a party's liability for death or personal injury resulting from negligence (Section 2(1), UCTA). Except insofar as the relevant term satisfies the requirements of reasonableness, such contracts cannot exclude or restrict liability: (i) for negligence (which includes a breach of an express or implied contractual obligation to take reasonable care or exercise reasonable skill) (Section 2(2), UCTA); or (ii) for misrepresentation (Section 3, Misrepresentation Act 1967). In addition, if a contract is regulated by UCTA, and one of the parties is dealing on the other's written standard terms of business, then except insofar as the relevant contractual term satisfies the requirements of reasonableness the other party cannot: (i) exclude or restrict his liability in respect of a breach of contract; or (ii) claim to be entitled to render a contractual performance substantially different from that which was reasonably expected of him; or (iii) claim to be entitled, in respect of the whole or any part of his contractual obligation, to render no contractual performance at all (see Section 3, UCTA). UCTA includes various other restrictions, particularly in the case of contracts for the sale of goods and contracts under which possession or ownership of goods passes.
If you wish to try to limit/exclude for liability in respect of reckless, deliberate, personal and/or repudiatory breaches of contract, you may wish to specify this in relation to the relevant provision (for example, using the following wording: "The limitations and exclusions of liability in this Clause [number] will apply whether or not the liability in question arises out of any reckless, deliberate, personal and/or repudiatory conduct or breach of contract").
Somewhat different rules apply to limitations of liability in contracts with consumers, and these provisions should not be used in relation to such contracts.
These guidance notes provide a very incomplete and basic overview of a complex subject. Accordingly, you should take legal advice if you may wish to rely upon a limitation or exclusion of liability.
Section 12.1
Do not delete this provision (except upon legal advice). Without this provision, the specific limitations and exclusions of liability in the document are more likely to be unenforceable.
Section 12.3
Optional element. Do you want to attempt to exclude all liability for free services and information?
This sort of exclusion is quite common, but unlikely to be enforceable in court.
Section 12.5
Optional element.
Section 12.6
Optional element.
Section 12.7
Optional element.
Section 12.8
Optional element. If the website operator is a limited liability entity (eg a limited company), do you want to expressly exclude liability on the part of officers and employees?
Section 13: Breaches of these terms and conditions
Section 13.1
Section 13.2
Optional element.
Section 14: Variation
Changes to legal documents published on a website will not generally be retrospectively effective, and variations without notice to and/or consent from relevant users may be ineffective.
Section 14.2
Section 14.3
Optional element. Will registered users be required to consent to variations?
Section 17: Third party rights
Optional element.
This provision is designed to exclude any rights a third party may have under the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999.
Section 18: Entire agreement
Section 18.1
Section 19: Law and jurisdiction
The questions of which law governs a document and where disputes relating to the document may be litigated are two distinct questions.
Section 19.1
This document has been drafted to comply with English law, and the governing law provision should not be changed without obtaining expert advice from a lawyer qualified in the appropriate jurisdiction. In some circumstances the courts will apply provisions of their local law, such as local competition law or consumer protection law, irrespective of a choice of law clause.
Section 19.2
In some circumstances your jurisdiction clause may be overridden by the courts.
Section 20: Statutory and regulatory disclosures
Do the Electronic Commerce (EC Directive) Regulations 2002 apply to the website or is the website operator registered for VAT?
This section can be deleted where website operator is not registered for VAT and the Electronic Commerce (EC Directive) Regulations 2002 do not apply. Generally, those Regulations will apply unless a website is entirely non-commercial, ie where a website does not offer any goods or services and does not involve any remuneration (which includes remuneration for carrying AdSense or other advertising).
Section 20.1
Optional element. Is the website operator registered in a trade or similar register that is available to the public?
The Electronic Commerce (EC Directive) Regulations 2002 provide that if you are "registered in a trade or similar register available to the public", you must provide "details of the register in which the service provider is entered and his registration number, or equivalent means of identification in that register".
Section 20.2
Optional element. Is the website operator subject to an authorisation scheme (eg under financial services legislation)?
The Electronic Commerce (EC Directive) Regulations 2002 provide that "where the provision of the service is subject to an authorisation scheme" you must provide "the particulars of the relevant supervisory authority".
Section 20.3
Optional element. Is the service provider a member of a regulated profession (eg solicitors)?
The Electronic Commerce (EC Directive) Regulations 2002 provide that if "the service provider exercises a regulated profession", it must provide "(i) the details of any professional body or similar institution with which the service provider is registered; (ii) his professional title and the member State where that title has been granted; (iii) a reference to the professional rules applicable to the service provider in the member State of establishment and the means to access them".
Section 20.4
Optional element. Does the website operator subscribe to any codes of conduct?
The Electronic Commerce (EC Directive) Regulations 2002 provide that "a service provider shall indicate which relevant codes of conduct he subscribes to and give information on how those codes can be consulted electronically".
Section 20.5
Optional element. Is the website operator registered for VAT?
Section 21: Our details
Optional element.
The provisions here reflect a mixture of EU law and UK law requirements relating to contact information.
All services covered by the Ecommerce Directive (which was implemented in the UK through the Electronic Commerce (EC Directive) Regulations 2002) must provide a name, a geographic address (not a P.O. Box number) and an email address.
Under distinct UK legislation, UK companies must provide their corporate names, their registration numbers, their place of registration and their registered office address on their websites (although not necessarily in this document). Sole traders and partnerships that carry on a business in the UK under a "business name" (i.e. a name which is not the name of the trader/names of the partners or certain other specified classes of name) must also make certain additional disclosures: (a) in the case of a sole trader, the individual's name; (b) in the case of a partnership, the name of each member of the partnership; and (c) in either case, in relation to each person named, an address in the UK at which service of any document relating in any way to the business will be effective. All operators covered by the Provision of Services Regulations 2009 must also provide a telephone number.
Section 21.1
Section 21.2
Optional element. Is the relevant person a company?
Section 21.3
Optional element.
Section 21.4
Optional element.
Free website terms and conditions: cover
1. This template legal document was produced and published by Docular Limited.
2. We control the copyright in this template, and you may only use this template in accordance with the licensing provisions in our terms and conditions. Those licensing provisions include an obligation to retain the attribution / credit incorporated into the template.
3. You will need to edit this template before use. Guidance notes to help you do so are set out at the end of the template. During the editing process, you should delete those guidance notes and this cover sheet. Square brackets in the body of the document indicate areas that require editorial attention. "ORs" in the body of the document indicate alternative provisions. By the end of the editing process, there should be no square brackets left in the body of the document, and only one alternative from each set of alternatives should remain. Elements may be specified as optional in the accompanying notes, but that does not mean that they are in all cases removable. Depending upon the circumstances, an optional element may be: (i) required by law; or (ii) necessary to ensure that the document is internally consistent.
4. If you have any doubts about the editing or use of this template, you should seek professional legal advice.
5. You can request a quote for legal services (including the adaptation or review of a legal document produced from this template) using this form: https://docular.net/pages/contact.
Terms and conditions of use
1. Introduction
1.1 These terms and conditions shall govern your use of our website.
1.2 By using our website, you accept these terms and conditions in full; accordingly, if you disagree with these terms and conditions or any part of these terms and conditions, you must not use our website.
1.3 If you register with our website, submit any material to our website or use any of our website services, we will ask you to expressly agree to these terms and conditions.
1.4 You must be at least 18 years of age to use our website; by using our website or agreeing to these terms and conditions, you warrant and represent to us that you are at least 18 years of age.
2. Credit
2.1 This document was created using a template from Docular (https://seqlegal.com/free-legal-documents/website-terms-and-conditions).
3. Copyright notice
3.1 Copyright (c) Sonanti Marketing 2025
3.2 Subject to the express provisions of these terms and conditions:
(a) we, together with our licensors, own and control all the copyright and other intellectual property rights in our website and the material on our website; and
(b) all the copyright and other intellectual property rights in our website and the material on our website are reserved.
4. Permission to use website
4.1 You may:
(a) view pages from our website in a web browser;
(b) download pages from our website for caching in a web browser;
(c) print pages from our website for your own personal and non-commercial use, providing that such printing is not systematic or excessive];
(d) stream audio and video files from our website using the media player on our website; and
(e) use our website services by means of a web browser, subject to the other provisions of these terms and conditions.
4.2 Except as expressly permitted by Section 4.1 or the other provisions of these terms and conditions, you must not download any material from our website or save any such material to your computer.
4.3 You may only use our website for your own personal and business purposes; you must not use our website for any other purposes.
4.4 Except as expressly permitted by these terms and conditions, you must not edit or otherwise modify any material on our website.
4.5 Unless you own or control the relevant rights in the material, you must not:
(a) republish material from our website (including republication on another website);
(b) sell, rent or sub-license material from our website;
(c) show any material from our website in public;
(d) exploit material from our website for a commercial purpose; or
(e) redistribute material from our website.
4.6 Notwithstanding Section 4.5, you may redistribute our newsletter in print and electronic form to any person.
4.7 We reserve the right to suspend or restrict access to our website, to areas of our website and/or to functionality upon our website. We may, for example, suspend access to the website. You must not circumvent or bypass, or attempt to circumvent or bypass, any access restriction measures on the website.
5. Misuse of website
5.1 You must not:
(a) use our website in any way or take any action that causes, or may cause, damage to the website or impairment of the performance, availability, accessibility, integrity or security of the website;
(b) use our website in any way that is unlawful, illegal, fraudulent or harmful, or in connection with any unlawful, illegal, fraudulent or harmful purpose or activity;
(c) hack or otherwise tamper with our website;
(d) probe, scan or test the vulnerability of our website without our permission;
(e) circumvent any authentication or security systems or processes on or relating to our website;
(f) use our website to copy, store, host, transmit, send, use, publish or distribute any material which consists of (or is linked to) any spyware, computer virus, Trojan horse, worm, keystroke logger, rootkit or other malicious computer software;
(g) impose an unreasonably large load on our website resources (including bandwidth, storage capacity and processing capacity);
(h) decrypt or decipher any communications sent by or to our website without our permission;
(i) conduct any systematic or automated data collection activities (including without limitation scraping, data mining, data extraction and data harvesting) on or in relation to our website without our express written consent;
(j) access or otherwise interact with our website using any robot, spider or other automated means[, except for the purpose of search engine indexing;
(k) use our website except by means of our public interfaces;
(l) violate the directives set out in the robots.txt file for our website;
(m) use data collected from our website for any direct marketing activity (including without limitation email marketing, SMS marketing, telemarketing and direct mailing); or
(n) do anything that interferes with the normal use of our website.
5.2 You must not use data collected from our website to contact individuals, companies or other persons or entities.
5.3 You must ensure that all the information you supply to us through our website, or in relation to our website, is true, accurate, current, complete and non-misleading.
6. Registration and accounts
6.1 To be eligible for an account on our website under this Section 6, you must [be resident or situated in the United Kingdom].
6.2 You may register for an account with our website by completing and submitting the account registration form on our website, and clicking on the verification link in the email that the website will send to you.
6.4 You must notify us in writing immediately if you become aware of any unauthorised use of your account.
6.5 You must not use any other person's account to access the website, unless you have that person's express permission to do so.
7. User login details
7.1 If you register for an account with our website, we will provide you with or you will be asked to choose a user ID and password.
7.2 Your user ID must not be liable to mislead and must comply with the content rules set out in Section 10; you must not use your account or user ID for or in connection with the impersonation of any person.
7.3 You must keep your password confidential.
7.4 You must notify us in writing immediately if you become aware of any disclosure of your password.
7.5 You are responsible for any activity on our website arising out of any failure to keep your password confidential, and may be held liable for any losses arising out of such a failure.
8. Cancellation and suspension of account
8.1 We may:
(a) suspend your account;
(b) cancel your account; and/or
(c) edit your account details,
at any time in our sole discretion with or without notice to you.
8.2 We will usually cancel an account if it remains unused for a continuous period of 18 months.
8.3 You may cancel your account on our website using your account control panel on the website.
9. Our rights to use your content
9.1 In these terms and conditions, "your content" means [all works and materials (including without limitation text, graphics, images, audio material, video material, audio-visual material, scripts, software and files) that you submit to us or our website for storage or publication on, processing by, or transmission via, our website].
9.2 You grant to us a worldwide, irrevocable, non-exclusive, royalty-free licence to use, reproduce, store, adapt, publish, translate and distribute your content in any existing or future media
9.3 You grant to us the right to sub-license the rights licensed under Section 9.2.
9.4 You grant to us the right to bring an action for infringement of the rights licensed under Section 9.2.
9.5 You hereby waive all your moral rights in your content to the maximum extent permitted by applicable law; and you warrant and represent that all other moral rights in your content have been waived to the maximum extent permitted by applicable law.
9.6 You may edit your content to the extent permitted using the editing functionality made available on our website.
9.7 Without prejudice to our other rights under these terms and conditions, if you breach any provision of these terms and conditions in any way, or if we reasonably suspect that you have breached these terms and conditions in any way, we may delete, unpublish or edit any or all of your content.
10. Rules about your content
10.1 You warrant and represent that your content will comply with these terms and conditions.
10.2 Your content must not be illegal or unlawful, must not infringe any person's legal rights, and must not be capable of giving rise to legal action against any person (in each case in any jurisdiction and under any applicable law).
10.3 Your content, and the use of your content by us in accordance with these terms and conditions, must not:
(a) be libellous or maliciously false;
(b) be obscene or indecent;
(c) infringe any copyright, moral right, database right, trade mark right, design right, right in passing off or other intellectual property right;
(d) infringe any right of confidence, right of privacy or right under data protection legislation;
(e) constitute negligent advice or contain any negligent statement;
(f) constitute an incitement to commit a crime, instructions for the commission of a crime or the promotion of criminal activity;
(g) be in contempt of any court or in breach of any court order;
(h) be in breach of racial or religious hatred or discrimination legislation;
(i) be blasphemous;
(j) be in breach of official secrets legislation;
(k) be in breach of any contractual obligation owed to any person;
(l) depict violence[ in an explicit, graphic or gratuitous manner;
(m) be pornographic, lewd, suggestive or sexually explicit;
(n) be untrue, false, inaccurate or misleading;
(o) consist of or contain any instructions, advice or other information which may be acted upon and could, if acted upon, cause illness, injury or death, or any other loss or damage;
(p) constitute spam;
(q) be offensive, deceptive, fraudulent, threatening, abusive, harassing, anti-social, menacing, hateful, discriminatory or inflammatory; or
(r) cause annoyance, inconvenience or needless anxiety to any person.
11. Limited warranties
11.1 We do not warrant or represent:
(a) the completeness or accuracy of the information published on our website;
(b) that the material on the website is up to date;
(c) that the website will operate without fault; or
(d) that the website or any service on the website will remain available.
11.2 We reserve the right to discontinue or alter any or all of our website services, and to stop publishing our website, at any time in our sole discretion without notice or explanation; and save to the extent expressly provided otherwise in these terms and conditions, you will not be entitled to any compensation or other payment upon the discontinuance or alteration of any website services, or if we stop publishing the website.
11.3 To the maximum extent permitted by applicable law and subject to Section 12.1, we exclude all representations and warranties relating to the subject matter of these terms and conditions, our website and the use of our website.
12. Limitations and exclusions of liability
12.1 Nothing in these terms and conditions will:
(a) limit or exclude any liability for death or personal injury resulting from negligence;
(b) limit or exclude any liability for fraud or fraudulent misrepresentation;
(c) limit any liabilities in any way that is not permitted under applicable law; or
(d) exclude any liabilities that may not be excluded under applicable law.
12.2 The limitations and exclusions of liability set out in this Section 12 and elsewhere in these terms and conditions:
(a) are subject to Section 12.1; and
(b) govern all liabilities arising under these terms and conditions or relating to the subject matter of these terms and conditions, including liabilities arising in contract, in tort (including negligence) and for breach of statutory duty, except to the extent expressly provided otherwise in these terms and conditions.
12.3 To the extent that our website and the information and services on our website are provided free of charge, we will not be liable for any loss or damage of any nature.
12.4 We will not be liable to you in respect of any losses arising out of any event or events beyond our reasonable control.
12.5 We will not be liable to you in respect of any business losses, including (without limitation) loss of or damage to profits, income, revenue, use, production, anticipated savings, business, contracts, commercial opportunities or goodwill.
12.6 We will not be liable to you in respect of any loss or corruption of any data, database or software.
12.7 We will not be liable to you in respect of any special, indirect or consequential loss or damage.
12.8 You accept that we have an interest in limiting the personal liability of our officers and employees and, having regard to that interest, you acknowledge that we are a limited liability entity; you agree that you will not bring any claim personally against our officers or employees in respect of any losses you suffer in connection with the website or these terms and conditions (this will not, of course, limit or exclude the liability of the limited liability entity itself for the acts and omissions of our officers and employees).
13. Breaches of these terms and conditions
13.1 Without prejudice to our other rights under these terms and conditions, if you breach these terms and conditions in any way, or if we reasonably suspect that you have breached these terms and conditions in any way, we may:
(a) send you one or more formal warnings;
(b) temporarily suspend your access to our website;
(c) permanently prohibit you from accessing our website;
(d) block computers using your IP address from accessing our website;
(e) contact any or all of your internet service providers and request that they block your access to our website;
(f) commence legal action against you, whether for breach of contract or otherwise; and/or
(g) suspend or delete your account on our website.
13.2 Where we suspend or prohibit or block your access to our website or a part of our website, you must not take any action to circumvent such suspension or prohibition or blocking (including without limitation creating and/or using a different account).
14. Variation
14.1 We may revise these terms and conditions from time to time.
14.2 The revised terms and conditions shall apply to the use of our website from the date of publication of the revised terms and conditions on the website, and you hereby waive any right you may otherwise have to be notified of, or to consent to, revisions of these terms and conditions.
14.3 If you have given your express agreement to these terms and conditions, we will ask for your express agreement to any revision of these terms and conditions; and if you do not give your express agreement to the revised terms and conditions within such period as we may specify, we will disable or delete your account on the website, and you must stop using the website.
15. Assignment
15.1 You hereby agree that we may assign, transfer, sub-contract or otherwise deal with our rights and/or obligations under these terms and conditions.
15.2 You may not without our prior written consent assign, transfer, sub-contract or otherwise deal with any of your rights and/or obligations under these terms and conditions.
16. Severability
16.1 If a provision of these terms and conditions is determined by any court or other competent authority to be unlawful and/or unenforceable, the other provisions will continue in effect.
16.2 If any unlawful and/or unenforceable provision of these terms and conditions would be lawful or enforceable if part of it were deleted, that part will be deemed to be deleted, and the rest of the provision will continue in effect.
17. Third party rights
17.1 A contract under these terms and conditions is for our benefit and your benefit, and is not intended to benefit or be enforceable by any third party.
17.2 The exercise of the parties' rights under a contract under these terms and conditions is not subject to the consent of any third party.
18. Entire agreement
18.1 Subject to Section 12.1, these terms and conditions[, together with [our privacy and cookies policy],] shall constitute the entire agreement between you and us in relation to your use of our website and shall supersede all previous agreements between you and us in relation to your use of our website.
19. Law and jurisdiction
19.1 These terms and conditions shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the Law of England and Wales.
19.2 Any disputes relating to these terms and conditions shall be subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the courts of England and Wales.
20. Our details
20.1 This website is owned and operated by Sonanti Marketing
20.4 You can contact us by using our website contact form. Click here
Free website terms and conditions: drafting notes
This is a free version of our standard website terms and conditions document. It is identical to that document, save that this version includes an SEQ legal credit.
In addition to the provisions that would typically be included in any set of website terms and conditions, this document includes provisions covering user accounts and user-generated content (although the latter are not as detailed as in some of our more sophisticated website terms and conditions documents).
If your website does not feature user accounts or interactive features, you may wish to consider our website disclaimer document instead of these terms and conditions.
Section 1: Introduction
Sometimes, there will be a contractual relationship between a website operator and a website user; other times, there will not.
Where there is no contractual relationship, legal notices can still have legal effects. For instance, licences of intellectual property rights and disclaimers of liability may be legally effective where there is no contract. Moreover, statutory and regulatory disclosure obligations can be fulfilled by means of legal notices irrespective of whether a contract subsists.
If however an operator is selling something to users, or wants to impose positive obligations upon users, or wants to institute prohibitions that are extraneous to any licence of intellectual property rights, a contractual relationship will usually be necessary.
To help ensure that a terms and conditions document is properly incorporated into a contract, the document should be expressly accepted by the user.
Common methods of gaining acceptance include: (a) incorporating a statement next to a submit button providing that, by pressing the submit button, the user agrees to the document; (b) using a checkbox to gain consent, and blocking registration form submission if the checkbox has not been checked; and (c) requiring users to scroll through the document, and click an "agree" button after doing so.
In all cases, the document should be available to users at the point of acceptance, either on screen or via a hyperlink. If a contractual document includes unusual and/or potentially controversial provisions, it may be necessary to bring these to the particular attention of users.
In general, you should not ask users to affirm that they have actually read a legal document - almost none will do so, and the reading of the document is not a precondition to its incorporation into the contract.
Section 1.2
Optional element.
The completed document should be easily accessible on the website, with a link from every page.
Section 1.3
Optional element. Will all or any website users give their express consent to the terms of this document?
Ideally, from a legal perspective, all users would be asked to expressly agree to the terms of the document. However, in practice, express consent is rarely sought from casual website visitors. On the other hand, it is easy to obtain the express consent of users who register with the website or submit any material to the website, eg by clicking "I accept" on an electronic version of the document. You should retain evidence of the acceptance of the document terms by each such user.
Section 1.4
Optional element. Are there any age restrictions on the use of the website?
The use of websites by minors can be legally problematic. There are a number of different legal issues. For example, under English law, contracts may be unenforceable against minors. Another issue concerns data protection. The law of data protection imposes additional burdens in relation to the processing of any personal data of a minor and personal data provided by a minor. The effects of the law of indecency may also depend upon whether a website is accessible by minors. Obviously, the inclusion of a requirement in your terms and conditions that minors refrain from using a website is no guarantee that they will do so. Where your website is directed at, or likely to be used by, minors, we recommend that you seek specialist legal advice.
Section 2: Credit
Section: Free documents licensing warning
Optional element. Although you need to retain the credit, you should remove the inline copyright warning from this document before use.
Section 3: Copyright notice
A copyright notice is an assertion of ownership.
Copyright notices usually take the form specified in Article 3(1) of the Universal Copyright Convention (although the UCC itself is now of very limited significance):
"Any Contracting State which, under its domestic law, requires as a condition of copyright, compliance with formalities such as deposit, registration, notice, notarial certificates, payment of fees or manufacture or publication in that Contracting State, shall regard these requirements as satisfied with respect to all works protected in accordance with this Convention and first published outside its territory and the author of which is not one of its nationals, if from the time of the first publication all the copies of the work published with the authority of the author or other copyright proprietor bear the symbol © accompanied by the name of the copyright proprietor and the year of first publication placed in such manner and location as to give reasonable notice of claim of copyright."
It will be rare for a website owner to be the sole proprietor of all the copyright in a website. For example, the software code used to run the website may belong to another person. For this reason, the notice here refers also to licensors.
Section 3.1
Section 4: Permission to use website
Every website is a compendium of copyright-protected works. These may include literary works, (website text, HTML, CSS and software code), graphic works (photographs and illustrations), databases, sound recordings and films.
The most fundamental principle of copyright law is that a person may not copy a protected work without permission. Using a website involves copying some or all of the works comprised in the website. Accordingly, a user needs permission to use a website. A "licence" is just such a permission.
In most if not all cases, by publishing a website a person will be granting an implied licence to website visitors to copy of the website. The problem with an implied licence is that the scope of the licence is inherently uncertain. Is the visitor permitted to download the entire website? Is the visitor permitted to reproduce elements of the website elsewhere?
Because of this uncertainty, most publishers will include an express licence setting out exactly what visitors are permitted to do in relation to a website and, just as important, what they are not permitted to do.
The scope of the licence will vary. In editing these provisions, consider carefully exactly what your users should be allowed to do with the website and material on the website.
Section 4.1
Section 4.2
Optional element.
Section 4.3
Optional element.
Section 4.4
Optional element.
Section 4.6
Optional element. Are users permitted to redistribute any specific content from the website (eg newsletters)?
Section 5: Misuse of website
Section 5.1
Section 5.2
Optional element. Should the use of data collected from the website to contact people and businesses be prohibited?
Section 5.3
Optional element.
Section 6: Registration and accounts
Section 6.1
Optional element. Do any eligibility criteria apply to account registration?
Section 6.2
Section 6.3
Optional element. Will users be permitted to share their accounts?
Section 6.4
Optional element.
Section 6.5
Optional element.
Section 7: User login details
Section 7.1
Section 7.2
Optional element.
Section 7.3
Optional element.
Section 7.4
Optional element.
Section 7.5
Optional element.
Section 8: Cancellation and suspension of account
Ensure that the account handling provisions in these terms and conditions are consistent with your privacy policy, including the personal data retention and deletion provisions in that policy.
Section 8.1
Section 8.2
Optional element.
Section 8.3
Section 9: Our rights to use your content
Section 9.1
Section 9.2
Section 9.4
Optional element. Should the website operator be granted a right to bring proceedings in respect of third party infringements?
Section 9.5
Optional element. Should users be asked to waive their moral rights (such as the right of paternity and the right to object to derogatory treatment) in the content they submit to the website?
Section 9.6
Optional element. Can users edit their own content after it has been posted to the website?
Section 10: Rules about your content
Section 10.2
This very general prohibition against unlawful user content may be supplemented by rules relating to specific kinds of illegality, as well as prohibitions upon lawful but undesirable content.
Section 10.3
Optional element.
Section 11: Limited warranties
Section 11.1
Optional element.
Section 11.2
Optional element.
Section 12: Limitations and exclusions of liability
Contractual limitations and exclusions of liability are regulated and controlled by law, and the courts may rule that particular limitations and exclusions of liability in contracts are unenforceable.
The courts are particularly likely to intervene where a party is seeking to rely on a limitation or exclusion of liability in its standard terms and conditions, but will also sometimes intervene where a term has been individually negotiated. The courts may be more likely to rule that provisions excluding liability, as opposed to those merely limiting liability, are unenforceable. If there is a risk that any particular limitation or exclusion of liability will be found to be unenforceable by the courts, that provision should be drafted as an independent term, and be numbered separately from the other provisions. It may improve the chances of a limitation or exclusion of liability being found to be enforceable if the party seeking to rely upon it specifically drew it to the attention of the other party before the contract was entered into.
Exclusions and limitations of liability in UK contracts are primarily regulated by the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 ("UCTA"). Contracts regulated by UCTA cannot exclude or restrict a party's liability for death or personal injury resulting from negligence (Section 2(1), UCTA). Except insofar as the relevant term satisfies the requirements of reasonableness, such contracts cannot exclude or restrict liability: (i) for negligence (which includes a breach of an express or implied contractual obligation to take reasonable care or exercise reasonable skill) (Section 2(2), UCTA); or (ii) for misrepresentation (Section 3, Misrepresentation Act 1967). In addition, if a contract is regulated by UCTA, and one of the parties is dealing on the other's written standard terms of business, then except insofar as the relevant contractual term satisfies the requirements of reasonableness the other party cannot: (i) exclude or restrict his liability in respect of a breach of contract; or (ii) claim to be entitled to render a contractual performance substantially different from that which was reasonably expected of him; or (iii) claim to be entitled, in respect of the whole or any part of his contractual obligation, to render no contractual performance at all (see Section 3, UCTA). UCTA includes various other restrictions, particularly in the case of contracts for the sale of goods and contracts under which possession or ownership of goods passes.
If you wish to try to limit/exclude for liability in respect of reckless, deliberate, personal and/or repudiatory breaches of contract, you may wish to specify this in relation to the relevant provision (for example, using the following wording: "The limitations and exclusions of liability in this Clause [number] will apply whether or not the liability in question arises out of any reckless, deliberate, personal and/or repudiatory conduct or breach of contract").
Somewhat different rules apply to limitations of liability in contracts with consumers, and these provisions should not be used in relation to such contracts.
These guidance notes provide a very incomplete and basic overview of a complex subject. Accordingly, you should take legal advice if you may wish to rely upon a limitation or exclusion of liability.
Section 12.1
Do not delete this provision (except upon legal advice). Without this provision, the specific limitations and exclusions of liability in the document are more likely to be unenforceable.
Section 12.3
Optional element. Do you want to attempt to exclude all liability for free services and information?
This sort of exclusion is quite common, but unlikely to be enforceable in court.
Section 12.5
Optional element.
Section 12.6
Optional element.
Section 12.7
Optional element.
Section 12.8
Optional element. If the website operator is a limited liability entity (eg a limited company), do you want to expressly exclude liability on the part of officers and employees?
Section 13: Breaches of these terms and conditions
Section 13.1
Section 13.2
Optional element.
Section 14: Variation
Changes to legal documents published on a website will not generally be retrospectively effective, and variations without notice to and/or consent from relevant users may be ineffective.
Section 14.2
Section 14.3
Optional element. Will registered users be required to consent to variations?
Section 17: Third party rights
Optional element.
This provision is designed to exclude any rights a third party may have under the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999.
Section 18: Entire agreement
Section 18.1
Section 19: Law and jurisdiction
The questions of which law governs a document and where disputes relating to the document may be litigated are two distinct questions.
Section 19.1
This document has been drafted to comply with English law, and the governing law provision should not be changed without obtaining expert advice from a lawyer qualified in the appropriate jurisdiction. In some circumstances the courts will apply provisions of their local law, such as local competition law or consumer protection law, irrespective of a choice of law clause.
Section 19.2
In some circumstances your jurisdiction clause may be overridden by the courts.
Section 20: Statutory and regulatory disclosures
Do the Electronic Commerce (EC Directive) Regulations 2002 apply to the website or is the website operator registered for VAT?
This section can be deleted where website operator is not registered for VAT and the Electronic Commerce (EC Directive) Regulations 2002 do not apply. Generally, those Regulations will apply unless a website is entirely non-commercial, ie where a website does not offer any goods or services and does not involve any remuneration (which includes remuneration for carrying AdSense or other advertising).
Section 20.1
Optional element. Is the website operator registered in a trade or similar register that is available to the public?
The Electronic Commerce (EC Directive) Regulations 2002 provide that if you are "registered in a trade or similar register available to the public", you must provide "details of the register in which the service provider is entered and his registration number, or equivalent means of identification in that register".
Section 20.2
Optional element. Is the website operator subject to an authorisation scheme (eg under financial services legislation)?
The Electronic Commerce (EC Directive) Regulations 2002 provide that "where the provision of the service is subject to an authorisation scheme" you must provide "the particulars of the relevant supervisory authority".
Section 20.3
Optional element. Is the service provider a member of a regulated profession (eg solicitors)?
The Electronic Commerce (EC Directive) Regulations 2002 provide that if "the service provider exercises a regulated profession", it must provide "(i) the details of any professional body or similar institution with which the service provider is registered; (ii) his professional title and the member State where that title has been granted; (iii) a reference to the professional rules applicable to the service provider in the member State of establishment and the means to access them".
Section 20.4
Optional element. Does the website operator subscribe to any codes of conduct?
The Electronic Commerce (EC Directive) Regulations 2002 provide that "a service provider shall indicate which relevant codes of conduct he subscribes to and give information on how those codes can be consulted electronically".
Section 20.5
Optional element. Is the website operator registered for VAT?
Section 21: Our details
Optional element.
The provisions here reflect a mixture of EU law and UK law requirements relating to contact information.
All services covered by the Ecommerce Directive (which was implemented in the UK through the Electronic Commerce (EC Directive) Regulations 2002) must provide a name, a geographic address (not a P.O. Box number) and an email address.
Under distinct UK legislation, UK companies must provide their corporate names, their registration numbers, their place of registration and their registered office address on their websites (although not necessarily in this document). Sole traders and partnerships that carry on a business in the UK under a "business name" (i.e. a name which is not the name of the trader/names of the partners or certain other specified classes of name) must also make certain additional disclosures: (a) in the case of a sole trader, the individual's name; (b) in the case of a partnership, the name of each member of the partnership; and (c) in either case, in relation to each person named, an address in the UK at which service of any document relating in any way to the business will be effective. All operators covered by the Provision of Services Regulations 2009 must also provide a telephone number.
Section 21.1
Section 21.2
Optional element. Is the relevant person a company?
Section 21.3
Optional element.
Section 21.4
Optional element.