1. Introduction
1.1 Important Information and Who We Are
Welcome to the Privacy and Data Protect Policy (“Privacy Policy”) for Phare Labs Limited (“we”, “us”, “our”, or “Phare Labs”), a company incorporated and registered in England and Wales under company number 13515798 whose registered office is at 71-75 Shelton Street, London, England, WC2H 9JQ. We are committed to protecting and respecting your privacy and Personal Data in compliance with the United Kingdom General Data Protection Regulation (“GDPR”), the Data Protection Act 2018 and all other mandatory laws and regulations of the United Kingdom.
This Privacy Policy explains how we collect, process and keep your data safe. The Privacy Policy will tell you about your privacy rights, how the law protects you, and inform our employees and staff members of all their obligations and protocols when processing data.
The individuals from which we may gather and use data can include our customers and third parties connected to our customers, and any other people that the organization has a relationship with or may need to contact.
This Privacy Policy applies to all our employees and staff members and all Personal Data processed at any time by us.
1.3 Processing Data on Behalf of a Controller and Processors’ Responsibility to You
In discharging our responsibilities as a Data Controller, we have employees who will deal with your data on our behalf (known as “Processors”). The responsibilities below may be assigned to an individual or may be taken to apply to the organization as a whole. The Data Controller and our Processors have the following responsibilities:
• Ensure that all processing of Personal Data is governed by one of the legal bases laid out in the GDPR (see 2.2 below for more information);
• Ensure that Processors authorized to process Personal Data have committed themselves to confidentiality or are under an appropriate statutory obligation of confidentiality;
• Implement appropriate technical and organizational measures to ensure a level of security appropriate to the risk associated with the processing of Personal Data;
• Obtain the prior specific or general authorization of the Controller before engaging another Processor;
• Assist the Controller in the fulfilment of the Controller's obligation to respond to requests for exercising the data subject's rights;
• Make available to the Controller all information necessary to demonstrate compliance with the obligations laid down in the GDPR and allow for and contribute to audits, including inspections, conducted by the Controller or another auditor mandated by the Controller;
• Maintain a record of all categories of processing activities carried out on behalf of a Controller;
• Cooperate, on request, with the supervisory authority in the performance of its tasks;
• Designate a data protection officer where required by the GDPR, publish their details and communicate them to the supervisory authority;
• Support the data protection officer in performing their tasks by providing resources necessary to carry out those tasks and access to Personal Data and processing operations and to maintain their expert knowledge;
• Ensure that any person acting under the authority of the Processor who has access to Personal Data does not process Personal Data except on instructions from the Controller; and
• Notify the Controller without undue delay after becoming aware of a Personal Data Breach.
2.1 Types of Data and Privacy Policy Scope
“Personal Data” means any information about an individual from which that person can be identified. It does not include data where the identity has been removed (anonymous data).
We may collect, use, store and transfer different kinds of Personal Data about you which we have grouped together below. Not all of the following types of data will necessarily be collected from you, but this is the full scope of data that we collect and when we collect it from you:
• Profile/Identity Data: This is data relating to your first name, last name, gender, date of birth.
• Contact Data: This is data relating to your phone number, addresses, email addresses, phone numbers.
• Marketing and Communications Data: This is your preference in receiving marketing information and other information from us.
• Device Data: Data processed by our hardware devices once they are installed by our customers, including optical sensor data, chemical sensor data, and environmental sensor data.
We also collect, use and share Aggregated Data. Aggregated Data could be derived from your Personal Data but is not considered Personal Data in law as this data will not directly or indirectly reveal your identity. However, if we combine or connect Aggregated Data with your Personal Data so that it can directly or indirectly identify you, we treat the combined data as Personal Data which will be used in accordance with this Privacy Policy.
We may also aggregate data to enable research or analysis so that we can better understand and serve you and others. For example, we may conduct research on your demographics and usage. Although this aggregated data may be based in part on Personal Data, it does not identify you personally. We may share this type of anonymous data with others, including service providers, our affiliates, agents and current and prospective business partners.
We do not collect any Special Categories of Personal Data about you (this includes details about your race or ethnicity, religious or philosophical beliefs, sex life, sexual orientation, political opinions, trade union membership, information about your health, and genetic and biometric data). Nor do we collect any information about criminal convictions and offences.
2.2 The Legal Basis for Collecting Data
There are a number of justifiable reasons under the GDPR that allow collection and processing of Personal Data. The main avenues we rely on are:
• “Consent”: Certain situations allow us to collect your Personal Data, such as when you tick a box that confirms you are happy to receive email newsletters from us, or ‘opt in’ to a service.
• “Contractual Obligations”: We may require certain information from you in order to fulfil our contractual obligations and provide you with the promised products or services.
• “Legal Compliance”: We’re required by law to collect and process certain types of data, such as fraudulent activity or other illegal actions.
• “Legitimate Interest”: We might need to collect certain information from you to be able to meet our legitimate interests - these covers aspects that can be reasonably expected as part of running our business, that will not have a material impact on your rights, freedom or interests. Examples could be your address, so that we know where to deliver something to, or your name, so that we have a record of who to contact moving forwards.
Under certain circumstances, you have the following rights under data protection laws in relation to your personal data:
• Right to be informed. You have a right to be informed about our purposes for processing your personal data, how long we store it for, and who it will be shared with. We have provided this information to you in this policy.
• Right of access. This enables you to receive a copy of the personal data we hold about you and to check that we are lawfully processing it (also known as a "data subject access request"). See section 4.5 below for more details on how you can make a data subject access request.
• Right to rectification. You have a right to request correction of the personal data that we hold about you. This enables you to have any incomplete or inaccurate data we hold about you corrected, though we may need to verify the accuracy of the new data you provide to us.
• Right to erasure. You have the right to ask us to delete or remove personal data where there is no good reason for us continuing to process it, where you have successfully exercised your right to object to processing (see below), where we may have processed your information unlawfully or where we are required to erase your personal data to comply with local law. Note, however, that we may not always be able to comply with your request of erasure for specific legal reasons which will be notified to you, if applicable, at the time of your request.
• Right to object. You can object to the processing of personal data we hold about you. This effectively allows you to stop or prevent us from processing your personal data. Note that this is not an absolute right, and it only applies in certain circumstances, for example:
(i) Where we are processing your personal data for direct marketing purposes.
(ii) Where we are relying on a legitimate interest (or those of a third party) and there is something about your particular situation which makes you want to object to processing on this ground as you feel it impacts on your fundamental rights and freedoms.
(iii) In some cases, we may continue processing your data if we can demonstrate that we have compelling legitimate grounds to process your information which override your rights and freedoms.
• Right to restrict processing. You have the right to request the restriction or suppression of their personal data. Note that this is not an absolute right, and it only applies in certain circumstances:
(i) If you want us to establish the data's accuracy.
(ii) Where our use of the data is unlawful but you do not want us to erase it.
(iii) Where you need us to hold the data even if we no longer require it as you need it to establish, exercise or defend legal claims.
(iv) You have objected to our use of your data, but we need to verify whether we have overriding legitimate grounds to use it.
• Right to data portability. You have the right to request the transfer of your personal data to you or to a third party. If you make such a request, we will provide you, or a third party you have chosen, your personal data in a structured, commonly used, machine-readable format. Note that this right only applies to automated information which you initially provided consent for us to use or where we used the information to perform a contract with you.
If you wish to make a request under any of these rights, please contact us at
hello@pharelabs.com.
5. Your Data and Third Parties
We may share non-Personal Data with third parties. We may share your Personal Data with subcontractors or affiliates, subject to confidentiality obligations to use it only for the purposes for which we disclose it to them and pursuant to our instructions.
We may also share Personal Data with interested parties in the event that Phare Labs Limited anticipates a change in control or the acquisition of all or part of our business or assets or with interested parties in connection with the licensing of our technology.
If Phare Labs Limited is sold or makes a sale or transfer, we may, in our sole discretion, transfer, sell or assign your Personal Data to a third party as part of or in connection with that transaction. Upon such transfer, the Privacy Policy of the acquiring entity may govern the further use of your Personal Data. In all other situations your data will still remain protected in accordance with this Privacy Policy (as amended from time to time).
We may share your Personal Data at any time if required for legal reasons or in order to enforce our terms or this Privacy Policy.