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Terms and Conditions

Legal Disclaimer

The information and clarifications provided on this page are for general guidance only and are not specific instructions on how to draft your own Terms and Conditions. You should not rely on this article as legal advice or recommendations on what you should actually do, we cannot anticipate the specific terms you wish to establish between your company and your customers or visitors. We recommend seeking legal counsel if you need assistance in understanding and creating your own Terms and Conditions.

Terms and Conditions - basic notions

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The Terms and Conditions (T&C) should be established according to the specific needs and nature of each website. For instance, a site that offers products to customers e-commerce transactions needs to have T&C that differ from those of a site that provides only information, such as a blog or a landing page directing visitors elsewhere.

Terms and Conditions provide you, as the website owner the opportunity to protect yourself against potential legal exposures. However, this can vary from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, so seek local legal advice if you wish to safeguard against legal liability.

What to include in the T&C document

Terms and Conditions (T&C) generally regulate the following issues: who can use the site; the possible payment methods; a statement that the site owner may change their offerings in the future; the types of guarantees the site owner provides to their customers; a reference to intellectual property or copyright issues, when relevant; the site owner's right to suspend or cancel a member's account; and much more.

 

To learn more about this, check out our article.

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