Decrypton is committed to protecting your
privacy. This Statement — referred to in the rest of this document as our
“Privacy Statement” describes our privacy practices regarding the Personal Data
(as defined below) we collect from users at our website, decrypton.in (collectively, the
“Site”) and online services (“Services”).
This
Privacy Statement applies to the processing of information about individuals or
entities that we collect when using our “platform” which means any website,
application or services Decrypton offers. This Privacy Statement
does not apply to the extent we process Personal Data in the role of a
processor or service provider on behalf of our customers.
1.
PERSONAL INFORMATION WE COLLECT
Personal
Data is any information that relates to identified or identifiable individual.
We collect this data in the following situations:
1.1
Information You Provide Us
- We may collect
Personal Data from you, such as your first and last name, e-mail and
mailing addresses, professional title, company name, and password when you
create an account to log in to our network (“Account”). Our Site lets you
store preferences like how your content is displayed, your location, safe
search settings, and favourite widgets. We may associate these choices
with your ID, browser or the mobile device, and you can edit these
preferences at any time.
- Our Site lets you
store preferences like how your content is displayed, your location, safe
search settings, and favourite widgets. We may associate these choices
with your ID, browser or the mobile device, and you can edit these
preferences at any time.
- When connecting to
our Services via a service provider that uniquely identifies your mobile
device, we may receive this identification and use it to offer extended
services and/or functionality.
- We retain
information on your behalf, such as files and messages that you store
using your Account.
- If you provide us
feedback or contact us via e-mail, we will collect your name and e-mail
address, as well as any other content included in the e-mail, in order to
send you a reply.
- When you provide
content of feedback, testimonials, inquiries, support tickets, and any
phone conversations, chat sessions and emails with or to us;
- When you
participate in one of Decrypton’s surveys, we may collect
additional information.
- We also collect
other types of Personal Data that you provide to us voluntarily, such as
your operating system and version, product registration number, and other
requested information if you contact us via e-mail regarding support for
the Services.
- We may also collect
Personal Data at other points in our Site that state that Personal Data is
being collected.
1.2
Information Collected via Technology
Our
Sites uses cookies and other technologies to function effectively. These
technologies record information about your use of our Sites, including:
- Browser and device
data, such as IP address, device type, operating system and Internet
browser type, screen resolution, operating system name and version, device
manufacturer and model, language, plug-ins, add-ons and the language
version of the Sites you are visiting;
- Please consult
our Cookie Policy for further information.
Usage data, such as time spent on the Sites, pages visited, links clicked, language preferences, and the pages that led or referred you to our Sites.
We
also may collect information about your online activities on websites and
connected devices over time and across third-party websites, devices, apps and
other online features and services. We use Google Analytics on our Sites to
help us analyze Your use of our Sites and diagnose technical issues
1.3
Information Collected from Third Party Companies
We
may receive Personal and/or Anonymous Data about you from companies that
provide our Services by way of a co-branded or private-labelled website or
companies that offer their products and/or services on our Site. These
third-party companies may supply us with Personal Data. We may add this
information to the information we have already collected from you via our Site
in order to improve the Services we provide.
2.
USE OF PERSONAL INFORMATION
We
may use the information collected in the following ways:
- Facilitate the
creation of and secure your Account on our network;
- Identify you as a
user in our system;
- Provide improved
administration of our Site and Services;
- Provide the
Services you request, including our data analytics services;
- Improve the quality
of experience when you interact with our Site and Services;
- Send you a welcome
e-mail to verify ownership of the e-mail address provided when your
Account was created;
- Send you
administrative e-mail notifications, such as security or support and
maintenance advisories;
- Respond to your
inquiries related to employment opportunities or other requests;
- In any other way we
may describe when you provide the Personal Data; and
- Send newsletters,
surveys, offers, and other promotional materials related to our Services
and for other marketing purposes of Company.
3.
DISCLOSURE OF PERSONAL INFORMATION
We
disclose your Personal Information as described below and as described
elsewhere in this Privacy Statement.
- Third Party Service
Providers. We
may share your Personal Data with third party service providers to provide
you with the Services that we offer you through our Site; to conduct
quality assurance testing; to facilitate creation of accounts; to provide
technical support; and/or to provide other services to the Company.
- Third Parties
Designated by You. In
general, we do not access any content being shared between users on our
Services. All user content is generally stored on our business customer’s
servers. When you use the Services, the Personal Data you provide to us
through the Services, will be shared with the third parties that you
designate to receive such information, including other websites, your team
members, colleagues, customers and business associates. Depending on the
type of access you grant to such third parties, they may also be permitted
to edit the information you have provided to us and to designate others to
access and edit such information. You may change your settings at any time
as to who has access to your information by going to your account settings
and changing your publishing options.
- Affiliates. We may share
some or all of your Personal Data with our parent company, subsidiaries,
joint ventures, or other companies under a common control (“Affiliates”),
in which case we will require our Affiliates to honor this Privacy
Statement.
- Corporate
Restructuring. We
may share some or all of your Personal Data in connection with or during
negotiation of any merger, financing, acquisition or dissolution
transaction or proceeding involving sale, transfer, divestiture, or
disclosure of all or a portion of our business or assets. In the event of
an insolvency, bankruptcy, or receivership, Personal Data may also be
transferred as a business asset. If another company acquires our company,
business, or assets, that company will possess the Personal Data collected
by us and will assume the rights and obligations regarding your Personal
Data as described in this Privacy Statement.
- Social Networking
Sites. Our
Services may enable you to post content to SNSs (e.g., Facebook or
Twitter). If you choose to do this, we will provide information to such
SNSs in accordance with your elections. You acknowledge and agree that you
are solely responsible for your use of those websites and that it is your
responsibility to review the terms of use and privacy policy of the
third-party provider of such SNSs. We will not be responsible or liable
for: (i) the availability or accuracy of such SNSs; (ii) the content,
products or services on or availability of such SNSs; or (iii) your use of
any such SNSs.
- Compliance with the
Law. We
share Personal Information as we believe necessary to comply with
applicable law, or to respond to subpoenas or warrants served on Company,
to protect or defend the rights or property of Company or users of the
Site or Services; and/or to investigate or assist in preventing any
violation or potential violation of the law, this Privacy Statement, or
our Terms of Use.
- Other
Disclosures. We
may also disclose your Personal Data, to fulfill the purpose for which you
provide it; for any other purpose disclosed by us when you provide it; or
with your consent.
4.
THIRD PARTY WEBSITES
Our
Site may contain links to third party websites. When you click on a link to any
other website or location, you will leave our Site and go to another site, and
another entity may collect Personal Data or Anonymous Data from you. We have no
control over, do not review, and cannot be responsible for, these outside
websites or their content. Please be aware that the terms of this Privacy
Statement do not apply to these outside websites or content, or to any
collection of your Personal Data after you click on links to such outside
websites. We encourage you to read the privacy policies of every website you
visit. The links to third party websites or locations are for your convenience
and do not signify our endorsement of such third parties or their products,
content or websites.
5.
YOUR CONTROLS AND CHOICES
We
provide you with certain controls and choices regarding the use of your
personal information, which may include:
- Correcting and
Updating Account Information. All users may review, update, correct or
delete the Personal Data in their user account (including any imported or
entered contacts) by contacting us. We will use commercially reasonable
efforts to honor your request. We may retain an archived copy of your
metadata records as required by law or for legitimate business purposes.
- Opting out of
Receiving Electronic Communications. If you no longer want to
receive marketing-related emails from us, you may opt-out via the
unsubscribe link included in such emails. We will try to comply with your
request(s) as soon as reasonably practicable. Please note that opting-out
of marketing communications does not opt you out of receiving important
business communications related to your current relationship with us, such
as important administrative messages that are required to provide you with
our Services.
- Cookies. If you decide
at any time that you no longer wish to accept Cookies from our Service for
any of the purposes described above, then you can instruct your browser,
by changing its settings, to stop accepting Cookies or to prompt you
before accepting a Cookie from the websites you visit. Consult your
browser’s technical information. If you do not accept Cookies, however,
you may not be able to use all portions of the Service or all
functionality of the Service. If you have any questions about how to
disable or modify Cookies, please let us know at the contact information
provided below.
6.
USE BY MINORS
Our
websites are not directed at children. We do not knowingly collect Personal
Information from children under the age of 16. Please contact us under “Contact
Us” section below if you believe we might have personal information from or
about a minor and we will take steps to delete their personal information from
our systems.
7.
CHANGES TO THIS PRIVACY STATEMENT
We
will update this Privacy Statement from time to time for any reason. Any
changes will be posted on this page with an updated revision date. We encourage
you to periodically review this Privacy Statement to remain informed about our
collection, processing and sharing of your Personal Data.
9.
CONTACT US
To
exercise your rights regarding your personal information, or if you have
questions about this Privacy Statement or our privacy practices, please use
this link,
contact us at contact@Decrypton.com, call us at
415-787-0744, or write us at:
Decrypton
Lucknow,
Uttar Pradesh, India
Already
data on the page
Privacy
Policy
A privacy
policy is a statement or legal document (in privacy
law)
that discloses some or all of the ways a party gathers, uses, discloses, and
manages a customer or client's data.[1] Personal
information can be anything that can be used to identify an individual, not
limited to the person's name, address, date of birth, marital status, contact
information, ID issue, and expiry date, financial
records, credit
information,
medical history, where one travels, and intentions to acquire goods and
services.[2] In the case of a
business, it is often a statement that declares a party's policy on how it
collects, stores, and releases personal information it collects. It informs the
client what specific information is collected, and whether it is kept
confidential, shared with partners, or sold to other firms or enterprises.[3] Privacy policies
typically represent a broader, more generalized treatment, as opposed to data
use statements, which tend to be more detailed and specific.
The
exact contents of a certain privacy policy will depend upon the applicable law
and may need to address requirements across geographical boundaries and legal
jurisdictions. Most countries have their own legislation and guidelines of who
is covered, what information can be collected, and what it can be used for. In
general, data protection laws in Europe cover the private sector, as well as
the public sector. Their privacy laws apply not only to government operations
but also to private enterprises and commercial transactions.[4]
California
Business and Professions Code, Internet
Privacy Requirements (CalOPPA) mandate that websites
collecting Personally
Identifiable Information (PII) from California residents must
conspicuously post their privacy policy.[5] (See also Online
Privacy Protection Act)
In
1968, the Council of Europe began to study the
effects of technology on human rights, recognizing the new
threats posed by computer technology that could link and transmit in ways not
widely available before. In 1969 the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development (OECD) began to examine the
implications of personal information leaving the country. All this led the
council to recommend that policy be developed to protect personal
data held
by both the private and public sectors, leading to Convention 108. In
1981, Convention for the Protection of
Individuals with regard to Automatic Processing of Personal Data (Convention 108)
was introduced. One of the first privacy laws ever enacted was the Swedish Data Act in 1973, followed
by the West German Data Protection Act in 1977 and the French Law on
Informatics, Data Banks and Freedoms in 1978.[4]
In
the United States, concern over privacy policy starting around the late 1960s
and 1970s led to the passage of the Fair
Credit Reporting Act.
Although this act was not designed to be a privacy law, the act gave consumers
the opportunity to examine their credit files and correct errors. It also
placed restrictions on the use of information in credit records. Several
congressional study groups in the late 1960s examined the growing ease with
which automated personal information could be gathered and matched with other
information. One such group was an advisory committee of the United States Department of Health
and Human Services,
which in 1973 drafted a code of principles called the Fair Information
Practices. The work of the advisory committee led to the Privacy Act in 1974.
The United States signed the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development guidelines in 1980.[4]
In
Canada, a Privacy
Commissioner of Canada was established under the Canadian
Human Rights Act in
1977. In 1982, the appointment of a Privacy Commissioner was part of the new
Privacy Act. Canada signed the OECD guidelines in 1984.[4]2
Terms
of service (also
known as terms of use and terms and conditions,
commonly abbreviated as TOS or ToS, ToU or T&C)
are the legal agreements between a service
provider and
a person who wants to use that service. The person must agree to abide by the
terms of service in order to use the offered service.[1] Terms of service
can also be merely a disclaimer, especially regarding
the use of websites. Vague language and lengthy sentences used in the terms of
use have brought concerns on customer privacy and raised public awareness in
many ways.
A
terms of service agreement typically contains sections pertaining to one or
more of the following topic
- Disambiguation/definition
of key words and phrases
- User rights and
responsibilities
- Proper or expected
usage; definition of misuse
- Accountability for
online actions, behavior, and conduct
- Privacy
policy outlining
the use of personal data
- Payment details
such as membership or subscription fees, etc.
- Opt-out policy
describing procedure for account termination, if available
- Sometimes contains
a Arbitration clause detailing
the dispute resolution process and limited rights to take a claim to
court
- Disclaimer/Limitation
of Liability clarifying the site's legal liability for damages incurred by
users
- User notification
upon modification of terms, if offered
Among
102 companies marketing genetic testing to consumers in 2014 for health
purposes, 71 had publicly available terms and conditions:[4]
- 57 of the 71 had
disclaimer clauses (including 10 disclaiming liability for injury caused
by their own negligence),
- 51 let the company
change terms (including 17 without notice),
- 34 allow data
disclosure in certain circumstances,
- 31 require
consumers to indemnify the company,
- 20 promise not to
sell data.
Among
260 mass market consumer software license agreements in 2010,[5]
- 91% disclaimed warranties
of merchantability or fitness for purpose or said it was "As is"
- 92% disclaimed
consequential, incidental, special or foreseeable damages
- 69% did not warrant
the software was free of defects or would work as described in the manual
- 55% capped damages
at the purchase price or less
- 36% said they were
not warranting whether it infringed others' intellectual property rights
- 32% required
arbitration or a specific court
- 17% required the
customer to pay legal bills of the maker (indemnify), but not vice versa
Among
the terms and conditions of 31 cloud-computing services in January-July
2010, operating in England,[6]
- 27 specified the
law to be used (a US state or other country),
- most specify that
consumers can claim against the company only in a particular city in that
jurisdiction, though often the company can claim against the consumer
anywhere,
- some require claims
to be brought within half a year to 2 years,
- 7 impose
arbitration, all forbid illegal and objectionable conduct by the consumer,
- 13 can amend terms
just by posting changes on their own website,
- a majority disclaim
responsibility for confidentiality or backups,
- most promise to
preserve data only briefly after terminating service,
- few promise to
delete data thoroughly when the customer leaves,
- some monitor the
customers' data to enforce their policies on use,
- all disclaim
warranties and almost all disclaim liability,
- 24 require the
customer to indemnify them, a few
indemnify the customer,
- a few give credits
for poor service, 15 promise "best efforts" and can suspend or
stop any time.
The
researchers note that rules on location and time limits may be unenforceable
for consumers in many jurisdictions with consumer protections, that acceptable
use policies are rarely enforced, that quick deletion is dangerous if a court later
rules the termination wrongful, that local laws often require warranties (and
UK forced Apple to say so).