Protect Your Online Business with Legal Documents

Table of Contents

Share at:

With E-Commerce becoming one of the fastest growing commercial markets, businesses are venturing online in order to conduct transactions and target new channels. While the prospering rise of the internet has presented new markets, the law is continuing to evolve in order to protect consumers from online businesses. When selling products and/or services online, it is important that a business protects itself through a website’s terms and conditions, terms of use and a privacy policy.

Terms and Conditions

The website terms and conditions regulate the online transactions where you sell your products or services to clients. The terms and conditions operate as a contractual agreement by explaining the terms of trade. They must be accessible and transparent, being attainable from the home page and present through a ‘click to accept’ button, or sent by email, before a transaction has been conducted.

A websites terms and conditions include clauses setting out product delivery, payment terms, refunds, repairs, warranties and cancellations. Such terms are mandatory consumer guarantees that are required under the Australian Consumer Law. The website terms and conditions enable you alleviate any potential disputes between clients, while minimizing your liability against deceptive and misleading conduct.

Terms of Use

While the terms and conditions apply to clients that are engaging in a transaction, the website terms of use apply to all users who visit the website. The terms of use express what visitors can or cannot do with the information displayed on the website. It is an important tool for websites as it protects your intellectual property from republishing without consent, while incorporating a disclaimer that specifies your limitations for liability.

Privacy Policy

Any business that collects personal information such as names, date of birth and email addresses are obligated to protect customers privacy under the Privacy Act 1988 (CTH). A Privacy Policy discloses how you collect, store and share customer data. An up-to-date Privacy Policy reassures visitors that their personal data is protected by explaining how data is captured, whether cookies are deployed and whether it is used for marketing and promotions to third parties. The Privacy Policy must feature in the navigation of a website and be accessible from every page of the website. Its inclusion on a website is a necessary safeguard to a potential breach of the Privacy Act 1988 (CTH), where companies may be liable to fines of up to $1.7 million.

Share at:

Simplify creating legal documents today

Browse through Lawpath's AI tools which can be used to draft, review and refine legal documents today!

Related Articles

How to Start a Removalist Business: 7 Easy Steps to Get You Started

Starting a removalist business means you'll be offering a service in constant demand. Find out how to get started in this guide.

How To Start a Not-for-Profit Organisation: A Guide to Helping People

Want to give back to the community or contribute to a cause you care about? Find out how to start a Not-for-Profit Organisation here.

How to Start a Lawn Mowing Business: A Clear Path to Success

Want to know how to start a lawn mowing business? Then, this post is for you! Here are some easy steps for success.

How Do Consignment Agreements Work?

Want to sell your goods without dealing with customers? Read this article to learn how to make consignment agreements work for you.

Why You Should Never Copy A Terms & Conditions

Although it may be tempting, you should never copy your terms and conditions from another website. Read more to find out why.

Enterprise Agreement vs Employment Agreement (2026 Update)

An employment agreement is negotiated between you and your employee, whereas an enterprise agreement is negotiated by a Union on behalf of multiple workers.