acre privacy

the short version

Your details, and what we do with them.

This explains what happens to your email when you join the acre waitlist. We've kept it short and in plain language.

Last updated: 21 June 2026


Who we are

acre is a men's wellness app, currently in pre-launch. If you have any questions about this notice, email us at acre@kairoai.uk.

What we collect

When you join the waitlist, we collect your email address. Our form provider may also automatically log basic technical details — like your IP address and the time you submitted — to help keep out spam.

Why we use it

We use your email for one thing only: to let you know when acre opens. Our lawful basis is your consent, which you give by submitting the form. We won't use it for anything else unless we ask you first.

Who handles it

Your email is processed by Web3Forms, a third-party form service that receives your submission and emails it to us. Web3Forms stores submissions on Amazon Web Services (AWS) infrastructure and states that it is GDPR-compliant. As the provider operates outside the UK, your data may be transferred internationally under its safeguards. We don't sell your details, and we don't share them with anyone for their own marketing.

This page also loads its typefaces from Google Fonts, which may record your IP address as part of serving them.

How long we keep it

We keep your email until acre launches and we've let you know — or until you ask us to remove it, whichever comes first. After that, we delete it.

Your choices

You can withdraw your consent or ask us to delete your email at any time — just email acre@kairoai.uk and we'll take care of it.

Under UK data protection law you also have the right to ask for a copy of the information we hold about you, to have it corrected, to object to how we use it, and to have it erased.

Complaints

If you're unhappy with how we've handled your information, please tell us first at acre@kairoai.uk — we'll acknowledge it within 30 days and do our best to put it right.

You can also complain to the Information Commissioner's Office, the UK's data protection regulator, at ico.org.uk.

Changes

If we update this notice, we'll change the date at the top of the page.