01
About these terms
These terms govern use of the Autovity website. Project work, subscriptions, repairs, hardware supply, and support services may also be governed by a proposal, statement of work, order form, or service agreement. If those documents conflict with these website terms, the signed service document takes priority.
02
Website use
You may use this website for lawful business and informational purposes. You must not attempt to gain unauthorised access, interfere with availability, introduce malicious code, degrade the service, or misrepresent an association with Autovity.
03
Services and proposals
Descriptions and indicative results on this website are general information, not a binding offer or guarantee. Scope, deliverables, dependencies, timescales, fees, acceptance criteria, support, and responsibilities will be confirmed in writing before paid work begins.
04
Client responsibilities
Clients are responsible for providing timely access, accurate requirements, authorised instructions, suitable test data, and decisions needed to deliver the agreed work. Clients must have the right to provide any data, systems, software, or materials shared with us.
05
Intellectual property
The website, brand, reusable methods, templates, and pre-existing materials remain the property of Autovity or their respective licensors. Ownership and licensing of project deliverables will be defined in the applicable service agreement.
06
Liability
Nothing in these terms excludes liability that cannot lawfully be excluded. To the fullest extent permitted by law, we are not liable for indirect or consequential loss arising solely from use of this website. Service-specific liability limits are set out in the applicable agreement.
07
Third-party services
Our website and delivered solutions may link to or integrate third-party services. Those services are governed by their own terms, availability, pricing, and privacy practices.
08
Governing law
These terms are governed by the laws of England and Wales. The courts of England and Wales have exclusive jurisdiction, unless mandatory law requires otherwise.