Privacy Policy

Kauser Media Group sometimes needs your personal information for certain purposes—for example, they ask for your payment account number and shipping address when you order something. The personal information you provide for one reason, however, may also be used for other purposes, and a lot of information about you and your household can be collected without your knowledge. This information can be used by the business, shared with related companies, and made available to others. We are increasingly being tracked, online and offline, as we go about our daily lives, and the information that is gathered about us over time and from multiple sources is combined and analyzed to create profiles of our preferences, behavior, attitudes, abilities and other characteristics.

One use for this profiling is to decide which products or services to advertise to you. You may not care if, based on your profile, you start to see ads for pickup trucks, work boots and power tools. But would you feel comfortable if you get ads for products or services related to a health condition that you prefer to keep private? What if you don’t have that health condition at all, but, from the information collected about you, it’s assumed you do? Would it be fair for some people to be chosen to see ads for particular jobs, housing or credit, but not you? What if the price or rate you’re shown for something is higher than what other people see? How else might this profiling be used? Can this information be accessed by law enforcement or other government agencies? In addition to concerns such as these, your risk of identity theft may increase as more and more information about you is collected. Exercising your rights to limit the data Kauser Media Group can use, store and share with others can help protect you from unwanted, unfair and harmful uses of your personal information.

Kauser Media Group must designate at least two methods for you to submit your request—for example, a toll-free number, email address, website form, or hard copy form. Kauser Media Group do not have to provide an online form for requesting deletion.

Kauser Media Group cannot make you create an account just to submit a deletion request, but if you already have an account with the business, it may require you to submit your request through that account.

Make sure you submit your deletion request through one of the business’s designated methods, which may be different from its normal customer service contact information. If you can’t find a business’s designated methods, review its privacy policy, which must include instructions on how you can submit your request.

If a business’s designated method of submitting requests to delete is not working, notify the business in writing and consider submitting your request through another designated method if possible.

You have the right to see the specific pieces of personal information a business has collected about you. This includes information you provided to the business directly and that it obtained from other sources. You also have the right to ask the business to tell you:

· The categories of personal information it has collected about you

· The categories of sources from which it collects the personal information

· The business or commercial purposes for which it collects or sells personal information

· The categories of third parties with whom it shares personal information

The words Kauser Media Group use in responding to these requests vary. Personal information is the type of information described in “Who and what the CCPA covers” (above).

Sources of your data typically include information you provide to a business, directly or indirectly, when you create an account, make a purchase, or use its website or app, as well as information collected about you from social media, public records, data brokers, and other types of companies.

Maintaining your account, detecting fraud, “personalizing your experience,” and other internal operations are considered “business purposes,” while “commercial purposes” means trying to sell you something. “Service providers” are companies hired by a business to help with its operations, such as processing consumers’ payments. “Third parties,” on the other hand, are companies or other types of entities that aren’t legally related to the business and aren’t service providers.

Note: Kauser Media Group may claim not to “sell” your personal information because they don’t actually hand it over to a third party in exchange for money. But they may benefit financially when they do things such as allowing third parties to track you on their websites. To be on the safe side, they may provide information about this even if they don’t describe it as selling your data.

You can request this information twice in a 12-month period, and the business must provide it to you free of charge. It will cover the 12 months up to the time of your request. There must be at least two ways for you to submit your request, including, at a minimum, a toll-free phone number. Other means of making this request may include an online form, a hard copy form with mailing address, and/or an email address. However, a business that only operates online and has a direct relationship with you is allowed to only provide an email address to make this request. If a business has a website, it must allow you to make such requests online.

The business must respond to your request within 45 calendar days, though it can take an additional 45 days (90 days total) if it notifies you. If you don’t get a response by the deadline, follow up with the company. There are some valid reasons why a business may refuse to give you the information—for example, if it can’t verify your identity, you’ve already made two requests within the last 12 months, or it is not the company that collected your information (for example, it only provides a service, like payment card processing or shipping, for the company that collected the information). If the business denies your request, it must explain why.

You may receive the information you requested by mail or electronically. If it is delivered electronically, it must be in a portable format (if that is technically possible) that would allow you provide it to someone else.

Right to delete (some of) your personal information

You have the right to ask a business to delete your personal information and to tell its service providers to do the same. There must be at least two ways for you to submit your deletion request, and the business must respond within 45 calendar days, or 90 days if it notifies you. Again, if the business denies your request, it must explain why.

There are some limits to your right to delete. The business only has to delete personal information that you gave it, not that it obtained from other sources. Furthermore, it doesn’t have to delete information that is necessary for security or fraud prevention, to provide a warranty, to notify you of recalls, or for certain other business purposes. Also, credit reporting agencies (such as Equifax, Experian and TransUnion) can still collect and disclose your credit information as allowed by the Fair Credit Reporting Act, and debt collectors can still try to collect on debts you owe, despite your request that they delete your information.

Note: Kauser Media Group are allowed to ask for personal information to verify your identity when you ask to see or delete your data, but they can only use that information to make sure it’s really you. You can authorize someone else to request your information or delete it on your behalf; the business can ask for proof of that authorization, from either you or your authorized agent, before acting on the request, unless you have provided the agent with power of attorney.

Right to opt out of sale

You have the right to ask a business that sells consumers’ personal information not to sell yours (opt out of sale). There must be at least two ways for you to do this. On the homepage of a business’s website, look for the “Do Not Sell My Personal Information” link. If there is a link on the homepage for Californians’ privacy rights, you may also find the “Do Not Sell” link there.

A business that gave you the information about its privacy practices offline but has a website must tell you how to find this link on its site. In a mobile app, the “Do Not Sell” link should appear on the download or landing page, and may be in other places within the app as well.

Other ways to opt out of sale can include a toll-free number, an email address, a form to submit in person or by mail, and a signal from an internet-connected device (this is called a “global privacy control”). If you’ve opted out, the business must wait at least 12 months before asking you to opt back in to the sale of your personal information. (Even if a business says it does not “sell” your data, it may offer you the ability to opt out of being tracked by third parties when you visit its website.) The right to opt out of sale doesn’t apply to all personal information. For example, certain medical information and consumer credit reporting information is excluded.

Note: Kauser Media Group do not need to verify your identity to honor a request not to sell your data, and you can authorize someone else to opt out of sale for you. The business may ask your agent for proof that you have given that permission and can deny the request if they can’t provide it or there is reason to believe that the request is fraudulent.

Right to not be discriminated against

Generally, Kauser Media Group cannot discriminate against you (deny goods or services, charge a higher price, provide a lower quality, etc.) for exercising your rights under the CCPA, and they can’t require you to agree to give up these rights. However, a business can offer you financial incentives, such as discounts, if you allow it to collect, keep, or sell your data. Before a business can enroll you in a financial incentive program, it must provide you with the details of how it works and get your agreement (opt-in). Furthermore, a business can offer you a different price, rate, or level of or quality of goods or services if you don’t allow it to collect, keep or sell your personal information, as long as that price or difference is directly related to how much your data is worth to the business.

Contacting us

If you have any questions about this policy, the practices of our sites or apps, your experiences with us in any way, or you would like to request a copy of any personal information we hold about you, you can contact us at info@kausermediagroup.com

Quick links

Cancel my registration, remove all my personal data and stop further data collection, request a copy of the personal information we hold about you : info@kausermediagroup.com