Legal Notice
At a Glance
- Open HR is a French simplified joint-stock company based in Paris
- Your data is hosted in France and the EU
- Contact: contact@open-hr.work
- DPO: dpo@open-hr.work for your data rights
Open HR
SASU (French simplified joint-stock company)
Capital social : EUR 1,500.00
60 rue Francois Ier 75008 Paris FranceRCS : Paris 994 927 242
EUID : FR7501.994927242
Publication Director: Johnathen Evans-Guilbault, President of Open HR
3.1Marketing Website (open-hr.work)
BunnyWay d.o.o. (Bunny.net) - Cesta komandanta Staneta 4A, 1215 Medvode, Slovenia. Infrastructure: Bunny Edge Storage with CDN distribution from European data centers.
3.2Application Platform
Clever Cloud SAS - 3 rue de l'Allier, 44000 Nantes, France (RCS Nantes 524 172 699)
3.3Database
OVHcloud - 2 rue Kellermann, 59100 Roubaix, France. MongoDB hosted in France, in accordance with our European data sovereignty commitment.
3.4Email Service
Brevo (formerly Sendinblue) - 106 boulevard Haussmann, 75008 Paris, France (RCS Paris 498 019 298)
Open HR
60 rue Francois Ier 75008 Paris FranceIn accordance with applicable privacy laws including GDPR and CCPA, you have rights over your personal data.
Data Protection Officer (DPO): dpo@open-hr.work
For California residents: Open HR does not sell your personal information. See our Privacy Policy for CCPA rights information.
In plain terms: You may not copy, reproduce or reuse the content of this site without our written permission.
All elements of the Site (text, graphics, logos, trademarks, etc.) are the exclusive property of Open HR. These elements are protected by French and international intellectual property laws.
Open HR endeavors to ensure the accuracy of information published on the Site but cannot guarantee its completeness. The Site may contain links to external sites for which Open HR is not responsible. To the fullest extent permitted by law, Open HR shall not be liable for any indirect, incidental, special, consequential, or punitive damages.
This legal notice is governed by French law. In the event of a dispute, and after an attempt at amicable resolution, exclusive jurisdiction is granted to the courts of Paris.