California Privacy Rights
This California Privacy Rights Notice supplements our Privacy Policy and applies to California residents where applicable. California residents may have certain rights regarding their personal information under California privacy laws, including the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) as amended by the California Privacy Rights Act (CPRA).
On this page
Personal Information We May Collect
We may collect identifiers such as name, phone number, email address, IP address, device identifiers, and similar information.
We may collect internet or network activity information such as website usage, pages visited, referral source, browser type, device type, advertising attribution data, analytics data, and interactions with our website.
We may collect sensitive personal information you provide about a potential legal matter, including injury information, accident details, health-related information, and related communications.
We may collect commercial or communication information such as inquiry history, call records, form submissions, SMS consent status, and communications.
How We Use Personal Information
We may use personal information to respond to inquiries, evaluate potential legal claims, communicate with you, provide intake follow-up, operate the website, improve services, measure marketing performance, attribute leads to advertising campaigns, comply with legal obligations, protect our rights, and support business operations.
Sharing of Personal Information
We may share personal information with service providers, vendors, analytics providers, advertising partners, call tracking providers, intake providers, co-counsel or referral counsel where appropriate, and other parties as needed to operate the website, respond to inquiries, evaluate case review requests, comply with legal obligations, or as permitted by law.
Some advertising, analytics, or retargeting activity may be considered “sharing” of personal information under California law. We do not sell personal information for money.
Your California Privacy Rights
California residents may have the right to:
- Request access to personal information we have collected about them.
- Request deletion of personal information, subject to legal exceptions.
- Request correction of inaccurate personal information.
- Opt out of the sale or sharing of personal information where applicable.
- Limit certain uses of sensitive personal information where applicable.
- Not be discriminated against for exercising privacy rights.
How to Submit a Request
To submit a California privacy request, you may:
- Use the form on the Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information page.
- Email privacy@insiderlawyers.com with the subject line “California Privacy Request.”
- Call 844-467-4335 and identify your request as a California privacy request.
- Mail a request to: Insider Lawyers — Privacy, c/o Countrywide Trial Lawyers, A Professional Law Corporation, 3435 Wilshire Blvd, Suite 1620, Los Angeles, CA 90010.
Please include your name, email address, phone number, and the specific right you are exercising so we can locate your records and respond.
Verification
We may need to verify your identity before processing a privacy request. We may request information reasonably necessary to confirm your identity and locate relevant records. The information you provide for verification will only be used to confirm your identity and respond to your request.
Authorized Agents
California residents may designate an authorized agent to submit certain privacy requests on their behalf. We may require proof of authorization (such as a signed permission or a power of attorney) and may still need to verify the identity of the consumer.
Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information
Where applicable, California residents may opt out of the sale or sharing of personal information. To submit an opt-out request, please use the Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information page or the contact information above.
If your browser sends a Global Privacy Control (GPC) signal while visiting this site, we will treat that signal as a valid opt-out of “sale” or “sharing” of personal information for that browser and device.