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Privacy policy
Last updated: 6 April 2026. This statement explains how Revivelyregener.world (“we”, “us”) processes personal data in accordance with Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (“GDPR”), the Data Protection Act 2018 (Ireland) (“DPA 2018”), and related Irish measures, when you visit our website or contact us from Ireland, elsewhere in the European Economic Area (EEA), or the United Kingdom (where UK GDPR and the Data Protection Act 2018 (UK) apply in a substantially equivalent way).
Our lead supervisory authority for cross-border processing carried out by us as established in Ireland is the Data Protection Commission (“DPC”). Nothing in this policy limits mandatory rights or remedies available to you under EU or Irish law.
If you reach us via online advertising (for example Google Ads), we do not use your data from a simple page visit to misrepresent what this site is: an editorial, informational publisher in Ireland. Conversion or measurement tags, if any, are described in our Cookie policy and run only with valid consent where Irish law requires it.
1. Data controller
The controller responsible for this site is:
Revivelyregener.world
2 Small Crane, Sea Rd, Galway, H91 PYD9, Ireland
Email: service@revivelyregener.world
Phone: +353 87 770 4187
We are not required to designate a Data Protection Officer (“DPO”) under Article 37 GDPR and the DPA 2018. You may still contact us at the email above for all data-protection queries. If that changes (for example because processing becomes large-scale systematic monitoring), we will update this policy and publish DPO contact details where applicable.
Where Irish law uses terms aligned with GDPR (such as “processing”, “controller”, “processor”, “personal data”), those terms have the meanings given in Article 4 GDPR unless stated otherwise.
2. Categories of data, purposes, and lawful bases
Server and security logs. Our hosting infrastructure may automatically record IP addresses, timestamps, browser identifiers, and requested URLs for security, troubleshooting, and legal compliance. Lawful bases: legitimate interests (Article 6(1)(f) GDPR) to maintain site integrity, balanced against your rights.
Contact form submissions. When you email us or use the enquiry form, we process your name, email address, message content, and consent records. Purposes: responding to you and keeping an internal record of correspondence. Lawful bases: consent where you tick the GDPR acknowledgement (Article 6(1)(a)) and, where relevant, steps prior to a contract or legitimate interests in handling commercial enquiries (Article 6(1)(b)/(f)).
Newsletter or marketing sign-ups. If we later launch a mailing list, we will collect only what is necessary and rely on consent with a clear opt-in, which you may withdraw at any time.
Cookie-derived data and similar technologies. Described in our Cookie policy, which reflects the European Communities (Electronic Communications Networks and Services) (Privacy and Electronic Communications) Regulations 2011 (S.I. No. 336 of 2011) as applied in Ireland. Non-essential cookies and similar storage are used only on the basis of your consent (GDPR Article 6(1)(a)), obtained through our cookie controls.
Hero newsletter / email field. If you submit your email via the short form in our page header, we process that address to show the confirmation page you requested and, if we operate a mailing list, to send messages you have clearly opted into. Lawful basis: consent (Article 6(1)(a)), evidenced by the required privacy-policy acknowledgement checkbox and submit action. You may withdraw consent at any time using the contact details below.
Special categories of data. We do not ask you to provide “special category” (sensitive) data as defined in Article 9 GDPR. Please do not send health, biometric, or similarly sensitive information via our forms unless you are legally required to do so; if you do, we will delete it where we are not obliged to retain it.
Automated decision-making. We do not make decisions based solely on automated processing, including profiling, which produce legal effects concerning you or similarly significantly affect you (Article 22 GDPR).
3. Retention
Security logs rotate according to hosting configuration—typically between 30 and 90 days—unless longer retention is required to investigate misuse.
Contact messages stay in our mailbox or ticketing archive for up to 24 months after the last relevant message unless a longer period is needed for legal claims, then we delete or anonymise them.
Consent evidence for cookies is kept for up to 12 months to demonstrate compliance, then refreshed when you interact with the banner again.
Where Irish or EU law requires us to keep certain records (for example tax, regulatory, or defence of legal claims), we retain personal data for the period imposed by that law and then delete or anonymise it where possible.
4. Recipients and processors
We use infrastructure and communications providers (for example hosting companies and email transit services) who process data on documented instructions. They are contractually bound under Article 28 GDPR.
If analytics or advertising tools are enabled following your consent, those vendors may receive pseudonymous identifiers. Names appear in the cookie list once tools are configured.
We do not sell personal data and we do not offer your data for commercial rental. We do not knowingly profile or market to children; our content is directed at adults. If you believe a child has given us personal data, contact us and we will take appropriate steps under Articles 8 GDPR and Irish guidance.
Processors must implement appropriate confidentiality and security obligations under Article 28 GDPR and Part 5 Chapter 4 DPA 2018. We assess sub-processors where our providers use them, to the extent contractually permitted.
5. International transfers
Where a processor or sub-processor processes personal data outside the EEA or outside a jurisdiction the European Commission has adequacy-listed, we rely on one or more of: Commission adequacy decisions under Article 45 GDPR; appropriate safeguards under Article 46 GDPR (including the EU Commission Standard Contractual Clauses and, where relevant, the UK International Data Transfer Addendum or UK IDTA); binding corporate rules where applicable; or derogations under Article 49 GDPR only where strictly necessary for limited transfers.
Where required by DPC and EDPB guidance, we carry out transfer impact assessments (“TIAs”) and implement supplementary measures. You may request further information about safeguards and a copy of relevant SCCs by contacting us (subject to commercial confidentiality).
Transfers to the United Kingdom may benefit from the European Commission adequacy decision of 28 June 2021; we still document safeguards where providers route data through other territories.
6. Security measures
We implement appropriate technical and organisational measures under Article 32 GDPR and section 49 DPA 2018, taking into account the state of the art, cost of implementation, and the nature, scope, context, and purposes of processing. Measures may include TLS for data in transit, access limitations on a need-to-know basis, patching, secure hosting configuration, and instructions to anyone acting under our authority.
No method of transmission or storage is completely secure. If you believe your interaction with us has been compromised, tell us promptly. In the event of a personal data breach likely to result in a risk to your rights and freedoms, we will notify the DPC within 72 hours where required (Articles 33–34 GDPR, Part 5 Chapter 5 DPA 2018) and communicate with affected data subjects when legally required.
7. Your rights
Subject to exemptions in GDPR and the DPA 2018, you have the following rights in relation to your personal data:
- Right of access (Article 15) — obtain confirmation of processing and a copy of personal data we hold.
- Right to rectification (Article 16) — correct inaccurate data or complete incomplete data.
- Right to erasure (“right to be forgotten”) (Article 17) — request deletion where grounds apply, for example where processing is no longer necessary or you withdraw consent.
- Right to restriction (Article 18) — limit processing in certain situations.
- Right to data portability (Article 20) — receive structured, commonly used machine-readable data you provided, where processing is based on consent or contract and automated.
- Right to object (Article 21) — object to processing based on legitimate interests (including profiling), and to object at any time to direct marketing.
- Rights related to automated decision-making (Article 22) — not applicable here as we do not conduct solely automated decisions with legal or similar significant effect (see section 2 above).
- Right to withdraw consent — where processing is consent-based, without affecting lawfulness before withdrawal.
- Right to lodge a complaint with the DPC or another EU supervisory authority; judicial remedy before the Irish courts or competent EU courts.
To exercise these rights, email service@revivelyregener.world with sufficient information for us to verify your identity (we may request additional proof to prevent unauthorised disclosure). Under Article 12 GDPR we usually respond within one calendar month from verification; that period may be extended by two further months where complex, in which case we will explain the delay.
Information is generally provided free of charge unless a request is manifestly unfounded or excessive, in which case Irish law permits a reasonable fee or refusal (Article 12(5) GDPR, section 86 DPA 2018).
Data Protection Commission (Ireland): www.dataprotection.ie · 6 Pembroke Row, Dublin 2, D02 X963, Ireland (see the DPC website for other office locations). Helpdesk (general information): (01) 765 0100 or Lo-call 1800 437 737 (hours published on dataprotection.ie). Complaints should normally be submitted in writing via the DPC’s online channels (for example forms.dataprotection.ie) unless the DPC directs otherwise.
8. Updates and contact
We review this policy when our processing activities change materially, when we add new tools or processors, or when the DPC, EDPB, or Irish legislators publish guidance or reforms we must reflect (including any future EU ePrivacy Regulation).
Previous versions can be supplied on request where we maintain them. Material updates will be flagged by revising the “Last updated” date at the top of this page and, where appropriate, a short notice on the site.
General information disclaimer: This website provides general lifestyle information only and is not professional or medical advice.