Legal notice
Last updated: June 11, 2026
1. Publisher
The Bonivoo website and service ("Bonivoo") are published by Pawel MYSLIWIEC, a sole trader operating as a French micro-enterprise under the trade name "Bonivoo". Registered office: 90 avenue Marceau Hamecher, 82000 Montauban, France. SIREN: 943 313 924 — SIRET (head office): 943 313 924 00020. NAF/APE code: 5320Z. Registered with the French National Business Register (RNE).
2. VAT
VAT not applicable, Article 293 B of the French General Tax Code (VAT-exempt small business scheme). Prices are therefore shown net, without VAT.
3. Contact
Email: contact@bonivoo.com — Phone: +33 6 88 78 75 08 — Website: https://bonivoo.com
4. Publication director
Pawel MYSLIWIEC.
5. Hosting
The website is hosted by Vercel Inc. — 340 S Lemon Ave #4133, Walnut, CA 91789, USA — https://vercel.com. The database, authentication and file storage are handled by Supabase, Inc., whose infrastructure is hosted on Amazon Web Services within the European Union (eu-west-1 region, Ireland). DNS is managed by Cloudflare, Inc.
6. Intellectual property
All elements of the website and service (the Bonivoo brand and logo, texts, design, interfaces, source code) are protected by intellectual property law and remain the exclusive property of the publisher unless otherwise stated. Any reproduction or reuse without prior authorization is prohibited. Logos and content uploaded by businesses remain their property.
7. Personal data
The processing of personal data is described in the Privacy Policy, available from the footer. Under the GDPR, you have rights of access, rectification, erasure, objection and portability, which can be exercised at contact@bonivoo.com.
8. Cookies
The use of cookies is detailed in the Cookie Policy, available from the footer.
9. Liability
The publisher strives to ensure the accuracy of information and the availability of the service, without guaranteeing the absence of errors or interruptions. The service is provided "as is".
10. Governing law and disputes
This legal notice is governed by French law. In the event of a dispute with a consumer, an amicable solution will be sought first; failing that, the French courts have jurisdiction.