We are Surpass Assessment. Depending on where you are, your company contact is:
We have created these combined terms of use and privacy policy to let you know about the TalentLMS eLearning service that you are about to use and how your personal data will be processed within this service.
The TalentLMS eLearning service is run by Epignosis (a company which has offices in the USA, UK and Greece). In accordance with EU/UK data protection law, Surpass Assessment (hereafter referred to as Surpass) has signed a data processing agreement (including Standard Contractual Clauses) with the Epignosis group of companies to protect the transfer to and processing of EU/UK originated personal data relating to the TalentLMS service in the USA.
When accessing this course through the public URL, you will take the course anonymously. No personal data will be captured, and your progress will not be recorded in the system.
The TalentLMS service has security measures in place to help protect against the loss, misuse or alteration of personal data. Epignosis, the owners of TalentLMS, has ISO27001 certification. If you would like to see more detail about the security measures in place, we can share with you the data processing agreement (including Standard Contractual Clauses) that Surpass has in place with the Epignosis group of companies.
All of the content in the TalentLMS eLearning service that you will access has been created by the Surpass training team and is protected by copyright. You can only use the training materials for your own training, and not copy or disseminate the training materials to others or disseminate the training materials outside the TalentLMS eLearning service.
You can only use the TalentLMS eLearning system for your Surpass training provided by the Surpass training team.
If you have any questions about these combined terms of use and privacy policy, please email the Surpass training team at SupportingServices@surpass.com.
If you have a privacy complaint, you can contact privacy@surpass.com, or in the UK complain to the ICO. In the USA, complain to your state privacy regulator.