Introduction
This notice explains My Blurbly's international compliance posture for launch across South Africa, the European Union, the United Kingdom and the United States.
Compliance posture
A plain-language notice for POPIA, GDPR, UK GDPR, CCPA-style rights, Brevo, Paddle and international rollout readiness.
Last updated: 7 June 2026
Current public policy for My Blurbly V3. These terms are intended to govern the live platform and payment-provider review pages from the date shown above.
This notice explains My Blurbly's international compliance posture for launch across South Africa, the European Union, the United Kingdom and the United States.
My Blurbly means the My Blurbly V3 website, application, tools, public pages, creator websites, community surfaces, Editorial AI features, ARC workflows, payment flows, email funnels and related services. User means any visitor, reader, author, reviewer, creator, influencer, affiliate, publisher, beta tester, customer, subscriber or account holder. Content means text, manuscripts, excerpts, reviews, comments, messages, images, covers, avatars, metadata, links, uploads, prompts, AI outputs, creator website materials and campaign assets. Paid Services means memberships, subscriptions, upgrades, credits, one-off digital tools, reports, ARC campaign upgrades, creator website upgrades or other paid products. Provider means a third-party service used to operate My Blurbly, including Supabase for data storage, Brevo for email, Paddle for payment processing when enabled, hosting providers, analytics providers and AI service providers.
My Blurbly's legal suite is written for POPIA transparency, GDPR/UK GDPR rights, CCPA-style disclosures, CAN-SPAM and Brevo consent expectations, Paddle Merchant of Record checkout expectations, AI manuscript ownership, creator economy disclosures and community moderation.
No policy can guarantee compliance in every country without legal review. My Blurbly should restrict or pause features where local law, payment provider rules, AI rules, email rules or consumer law require additional implementation.
Users may access the policies before signing up or purchasing, ask questions about the policies, request privacy access/correction/deletion where applicable, cancel subscriptions through the available account or payment-provider route, report unsafe content, and contact My Blurbly about disputes or legal requests.
Users must provide accurate information, keep account credentials secure, respect intellectual property and privacy rights, use the platform lawfully, avoid misleading claims, disclose paid relationships where required, follow community rules, and only upload or process content they have the right to use.
My Blurbly may operate, secure, change, pause, restrict, remove, label, moderate, investigate or discontinue features where needed for safety, compliance, platform integrity, provider requirements, fraud prevention, payment risk, beta testing or legal obligations.
To the maximum extent allowed by applicable law, My Blurbly is provided on an as-is and as-available basis. My Blurbly is not liable for indirect, incidental, consequential, special, punitive or loss-of-profit damages, or for loss caused by user content, third-party providers, payment providers, AI inaccuracies, unavailable features or unlawful user conduct.
Users should first contact My Blurbly at the contact address in this document so the issue can be reviewed informally. If informal resolution fails, disputes will be handled under the governing law and competent courts stated below, unless mandatory consumer law gives the user a different non-waivable forum or remedy.
These terms are intended to be governed by the laws of the Republic of South Africa, unless a mandatory consumer, privacy or platform law in another jurisdiction applies and cannot legally be excluded.
Questions, legal notices, privacy requests, takedown requests, refund questions and account deletion requests should be sent to support@myblurbly.com. My Blurbly should publish any updated support address, business address or provider-required buyer support details before live paid rollout.
Material changes to payments, subscriptions, affiliate payouts, email funnels, AI processing, cookies, messaging, ARC or creator websites should trigger legal review and document updates.