Política de privacidade

[Last Revised: January 23, 2020]

This privacy notice (“Privacy Notice”) for California Residents under the California Consumer Privacy Act of 2018 (“ CCPA”) governs the manner in which we process information collected from our websites’ users who reside in the State of California (“Consumers” as defined under the CCPA, and will be referred herein as “you”).

Any terms defined in the CCPA have the same meaning when used in this Privacy Notice. Further, this Privacy Notice is an integral part of our Privacy Policy and thus, definitions used herein but not defined herein shall have the meaning ascribed to them in our Privacy Policy

CATEGORIES OF PERSONAL INFORMATION WE COLLECT

Under the CCPA, “Personal Information” is defined as any information that identifies, relates to, describes, references, is capable of being associated with, or could reasonably be linked, directly or indirectly, with a particular consumer, household or device.

Please note that, under the CCPA Personal Information does not include: publicly available information from government records and deidentified or aggregated consumer information, information excluded from the CCPA’s scope (e.g., health or medical information covered by applicable laws such as the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA)); and information covered by certain sector-specific privacy laws (e.g., the California Financial Information Privacy Act (FIPA)).

The table below describes the types of data we collect and have collected in the past:

Category

  1. Identifiers.

Examples

A real name, alias, postal address, unique personal identifier, online identifier, Internet Protocol address, email address, account name, Social Security number, driver’s license number, passport number, or other similar identifiers.

Collected

Yes

Category

  1. Personal information categories listed in the California Customer Records statute (Cal. Civ. Code 1798.80(e)).

Examples

A name, signature, Social Security number, physical characteristics or description, address, telephone number, passport number, driver’s license or state identification card number, insurance policy number, education, employment, employment history, bank account number, credit card number, debit card number, or any other financial information, medical information, or health insurance information.

Some personal information included in this category may overlap with other categories

Collected

Yes

Category

  1. Protected classification characteristics under California or federal law.

Examples

Age (40 years or older), race, color, ancestry, national origin, citizenship, religion or creed, marital status, medical condition, physical or mental disability, sex (including gender, gender identity, gender expression, pregnancy or childbirth and related medical conditions), sexual orientation, veteran or military status, genetic information (including familial genetic information).

Collected

No

Category

  1. Commercial information.

Examples

Records of personal property, products or services purchased, obtained, or considered, or other purchasing or consuming histories or tendencies.

Collected

No

Category

  1. Biometric information.

Examples

Genetic, physiological, behavioral, and biological characteristics, or activity patterns used to extract a template or other identifier or identifying information, such as, fingerprints, faceprints, and voiceprints, iris or retina scans, keystroke, gait, or other physical patterns, and sleep, health, or exercise data.

Collected

No

Category

  1. Internet or other similar network activity.

Examples

Browsing history, search history, information on a consumer’s interaction with a website, application, or advertisement.

Collected

Yes

Category

  1. Geolocation data.

Examples

Physical location or movements.

Collected

No

Category

  1. Sensory data.

Examples

Audio, electronic, visual, thermal, olfactory, or similar information.

Collected

No

Category

  1. Professional or employment-related information.

Examples

Current or past job history or performance evaluations.

Collected

No

Category

  1. Non-public education information (per the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (20 U.S.C. Section 1232g, 34 C.F.R. Part 99)).

Examples

Education records directly related to a student maintained by an educational institution or party acting on its behalf, such as grades, transcripts, class lists, student schedules, student identification codes, student financial information, or student disciplinary records.

Collected

No

Category

  1. Inferences drawn from other personal information.

Examples

Profile reflecting a person’s preferences, characteristics, psychological trends, predispositions, behavior, attitudes, intelligence, abilities, and aptitudes.

Collected

No

SHARING INFORMATION

We may disclose your Personal Information to a third party for a business purpose. When we disclose Personal Information for a business purpose, we enter a contract that describes the purpose and requires the recipient to both keep that Personal Information confidential and not use it for any purpose except performing the contract.

We share your Personal Information with the following categories of third parties:

Service providers.

Data aggregators.

Business Partners – Advertisers.

DISCLOSURES OF PERSONAL INFORMATION FOR A BUSINESS PURPOSE

In the preceding twelve (12) months, the Company has disclosed the following categories of Personal Information for a business purpose:

Category A: Identifiers.

Category F: Internet or other similar network activity.

HOW WE COLLECT YOUR INFORMATION

We collect the above data from you, in the following ways:

Directly from you, for example, if you contact us;

Indirectly from you, for example, from observing your actions on our website;

From third-party business partners such as analytics providers.

USE OF PERSONAL INFORMATION

We will not share your Personal Information outside as specifically business purposes mentioned here in:

To fulfill or meet the reason you provided the information. For example, if you contact us with an inquiry and share your name and contact information, we will use that Personal Information to respond to your inquiry.

To provide, support, personalize, and develop our website and Services, as well as improve our Services.

For security and fraud detection purposes, and to maintain the safety, security, and integrity of our Services.

For testing, research, analysis, and product development, including to develop and improve our Services.

To respond to law enforcement requests and as required by applicable law, court order, or governmental regulations.

To evaluate or conduct a merger, divestiture, restructuring, reorganization, dissolution, or other sale or transfer of some or all of our assets, whether as a going concern or as part of bankruptcy, liquidation, or similar proceeding.

To evaluate or conduct a merger, divestiture, restructuring, reorganization, dissolution, or other sale or transfer of some or all of our assets, whether as a going concern or as part of bankruptcy, liquidation, or similar proceeding.

We will not collect additional categories of Personal Information or use the Personal Information we collected for materially different, unrelated, or incompatible purposes without providing you notice.

SALES OF PERSONAL INFORMATION

In the preceding twelve (12) months, Company has not sold Personal Information.

USERS’ RIGHTS & CONTROLS

The CCPA provides consumers with specific rights regarding their Personal Information.  Please review our Privacy Rights Policy regarding your rights under applicable law.

We provide you with the ability to exercise certain choices and controls in connection with our treatment of your Personal Information, depending on your relationship with us. You may exercise any or all of your rights in relation to your Personal Information by filling out PRR Form and send it to our privacy team at: dpo@ceilysorse.com

AMENDMENTS

As required under the CCPA, we will update this Privacy Notice every 12 months. The last revision date will be reflected in the “Last Revised” heading located at the top of the Privacy Notice.

CONTACT US

If you have any questions or concerns regarding privacy issues, or if you wish to be provided with any other information related to our privacy practices, please contact us at:

ceilysorse.com

via our Contact Us form located in the footer of each page within our websites; or

send us an email: info@ceilysorse.com

  1. На сторінці Jogo Responsável має бути:

Заголовок ( Н1 ): Jogo Responsável

Заголовок ( Н2 ): How to gamble responsibly

[Last Revised: January 23, 2020]

As a provider of information regarding gaming and gambling, the Company (as defined in the Agreement) promotes responsible gambling and encourages all of the visitors to the website and users of the services offered via the website who wish to game and gamble, to do so responsibly.

We want you to enjoy gaming and gambling, but to always do so wisely.

LEGAL AGE FOR GAMBLING

Before you start gambling, always check your local jurisdiction laws on what constitutes underage gambling. In a lot of cases, people may only engage in gambling or gaming if they are over the age of 18. However, the age at which gambling/gaming is legal under the law or jurisdiction which applies to you (“Legal Age”), varies worldwide.

We provide further information about gambling ages and local casino restrictions.

If you live with any person who is not of Legal Age, take steps to ensure that they do not have access to your username and password of any gambling site. Do not leave those who are not of Legal Age unattended near your computer when the site is open

There are a number of third party applications that parents or guardians can use to monitor or restrict the use o f their computer’s access to the Internet: 

Net Nanny

CYBERsitter

CYBERPATROL

RESPONSIBLE GAMBLING

Have you ever found yourself wondering how to recover lost money in the casino or how to recover from a big gambling loss? Take a step back and consider if the way you are playing means you are gambling irresponsibly.

How to gamble responsibly

In order to gamble responsibly you should remember the following:

Gambling is a form of entertainment. It is not a way to get rich quickly and pay off your debts.

Gambling is not a way to make money, the vast majority of gamblers actually lose money.

Never wager more than you can comfortably afford to lose.

Never wager with funds that you need to use for your day to day living expenses.

Place limits on your gambling, for example, this can include setting limits on the time you spend gambling, the amount you gamble each week, the amount you deposit in your account each week and/or the amount you can afford to lose each week

Never chase your losses.

Do you ever find yourself thinking, how is my gambling luck today? Do not allow this to dictate your gambling behaviour. NEVER trust sites about gambling horoscopes or sites telling you which days are lucky to gamble on. This is not responsible gambling – these are absolutely not based on any data and gambling is, by nature, purely about chance.

How to stop gambling

You need to be aware of how to stop gambling before it becomes a big part of your life. Trustworthy gambling sites include safeguarding measures such as the following, so look out for these in advance.

Set a deposit limit: you can choose a capping amount daily/weekly/monthly/annually and your account won’t let you surpass this.

Apply a cooling-off period: where you can apply a pay-to-play restriction on yourself for a certain amount of time.

See profit and loss graph: see at-a-glance your ‘winning’ and ‘losing’ months through an easy-to-understand infographic.

Reality check: set up an interval-based popup timer to ask you if you still want to play while you’re logged in.

Self-exclusion or self-ban: choose to exclude your account from all/selected services for an amount of time (normally there is a minimum time set). If you want to know how to lift a self-ban from a casino, you’ll usually need to get in touch with their customer services if it’s before the set date.

Responsible gambling info: every single gambling site should a page with advice and information, as well as links to related organisations and help services.

The American Association of Psychiatry recommend certain self-help strategies to help with cravings if you feel the signs of a problem becoming prevalent.

Reach out for support by confiding in a trusted friend or going to a Gamblers Anonymous meeting.

Distract yourself with other activities that you enjoy – avoid isolation by looking for healthy ways to socialize.

Postpone your gambling by giving yourself a longer period to wait (it may allow the urge to pass or weaken).

Try to give yourself a reality check – imagine what will happen after you gamble, and the way it makes you feel.

The financial implications of gambling

A very common player questions is how much money can you win gambling without paying taxes? The tax-free amount varies depending on your country of residence.

In the UK, you do not have to declare or pay taxes on gambling winnings

In the USA, you will be taxed 25% on your winnings, known as gambling income (this includes casino games, sports betting, racetracks, game shows, lotteries, and bingo).

In Canada, you do not have to pay taxes on gambling winnings, but must declare if you earn interest on your winnings (this is taxable).

Something related that a lot of players don’t know about is how to prove gambling losses. Again, in the USA you must follow the IRS guidelines on this. Take a look at the official site page about Gambling Income and Losses.

Be aware of the signs: how to help a gambling addict

We understand that some people who develop a problem with their gambling don’t always realize it. You should consider the following questions, in order to assist to establish whether you or a loved one has a gambling problem.

Have ever you lied about the extent or success of your gambling?

Do you gamble when you are depressed or to escape issues in your life?

Do you borrow or steal money to gamble?

Does gambling affecting your relationships with other people?

Do you gamble in order to solve your financial difficulties?

If you run out of money when you’re gambling do you feel loss and despair, and want to find money to gamble again as soon as possible?

Have you ever lied to cover up the amount of money or time you have spent gambling?

Have you ever been forced to rely on others to finance your gaming?

Do your thoughts constantly turn to gambling?

Have you ever tried to win back losses by taking risks you usually would not take?

GAMBLING ADDICTION HELP SERVICES

If you feel that you are experiencing problems with gambling, you should seek help from a professional body or gambling addiction charity. You can seek help from the following organizations and services, but remember that there may be more depending on which country you are in.

Gambling Therapy

Gamblers Anonymous

National Council on Problem Gambling

GamCare

GamStop

BeGambleAware

NHS Problem Gambling Help

UK Gambling Commission Advice

COMPLIANCE WITH LAW

Please be aware that werbetasa.com is only intended to be used by visitors in jurisdictions where the use of online gambling services is legal.

Before considering gambling online, you must check the gambling laws of the country you reside in. You must refrain from using this site, and/or any other third-party websites to which this site may refer, if the laws of the jurisdiction in which you reside, prohibit such use.