DISCOVER THE SOLUTIONS TO MAKE COMPLIANT YOUR WEBSITE OR YOUR APP
DATA PROTECTION SHOULD BE AN INTEGRAL PART OF EVERY WEBSITE AND IS MANDATORY BY LAW.
Have a Privacy and Cookie policy that includes the third-party services that are used, e.g. Google Analytics and other tracking systems.
The cookie law in force in the EU obliges the publication of a banner, from which the visitor expresses his consent to the installation of profiling cookies.
Your website's Terms and Conditions show the terms of use and protect you from liability. They are a great defense tool.
The consent database allows you to collect the consents of your users to consider them valid. For example, you need it if you have a newsletter or a registration form.
Spain is one of the countries that our legal team manages most closely. We follow the main national and international regulations and develop solutions that take into account the most stringent requirements and regulations. Our legal texts comply with the GDPR, the ePrivacy Directive, the CCPA and other regulations. In addition, we regularly monitor the main national and international regulations to ensure that we meet all the necessary requirements.
GDPR stands for General Data Protection Regulation.
This is the European Regulation 2016/679.
In short, the GDPR defines how to process personal data, including how to collect the consent, use, protection and sharing of the same.
The GDPR exists to regulate data usage and ensure the protection of all individuals whose personal information falls within its scope by giving them full control over their data.
The California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) is a state data protection law that regulates how businesses around the world are permitted to process the personal information of California residents.
The CCPA went into effect on January 1, 2020. This is the first law of its kind in the United States. Effective January 1, 2023, the California Privacy Rights Act (CPRA) went into effect, amending and extending the CCPA.
This is the Brazilian Personal Data Protection Act (LGPD, Lei Geral de Proteção de Dados). We can consider it as a Brazilian GDPR. The LGPD has many similarities with the European regulation and serves to regulate all those areas in which there is no clear legal framework, in some cases even to replace.
The LGPD wants to create a clear legal framework for the use of personal data in Brazil, online and offline, in the private and public sector.
*The Client acknowledges and accepts that the services described on this page, the contents of iubenda.com and the documents generated using the Iubenda services are provided for informational purposes. Although the clauses and provisions that can be selected in the generator have been drawn up by a team of Iubenda consultants and are subject to constant review and updating, the generation of documents takes place in a fully automated way. Therefore, the Service does not constitute or replace legal advice, nor does it give rise to a mandate relationship between the client and the lawyer. Despite the maximum effort aimed at offering the best possible service, neither Iubenda nor Nominalia can guarantee that the documents generated are perfectly compliant with the applicable law. Customers and Users are therefore advised not to rely on the documents generated with iubenda without the assistance of a lawyer qualified in the relevant legal system(s).