Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information

Last updated: 14 April 2026

California's CCPA (as amended by CPRA) gives you the right to tell us not to “sell” or “share” your personal information. “Sharing” here has a specific meaning — disclosing personal information for cross-context behavioral advertising, whether or not money changes hands.

Does Paytia sell your personal information?

No. We don't sell personal information for money. We never have.

Does Paytia share your personal information?

Possibly, depending on how California law applies to our ad and analytics stack. We use Google Analytics 4 and Google Ads. These tools can combine your data with information from other sources to show ads across sites. Under a strict reading of CCPA, that may count as “sharing.” We're treating it as sharing until our attorney confirms otherwise, which means you have the right to opt out.

How to opt out

You've got three ways to opt out:

What happens next

We'll process your opt-out within 15 business days, as required by CCPA. You don't need to create an account to submit a request, and you don't need to verify your identity just to opt out of sale or sharing (verification is only required for right-to-know and right-to-delete).

Once you've opted out, we won't ask you to opt back in for at least 12 months.

Authorized agents

You can use an authorized agent to submit the opt-out for you. The agent needs signed permission from you. We may still contact you directly to confirm the agent is acting on your behalf.

No discrimination

We won't charge you a different price, give you worse service, or refuse to serve you because you opted out. Your use of Paytia doesn't change.

Other states

If you live in Virginia, Colorado, Connecticut, Utah, Texas, Oregon, Montana, Delaware, Iowa, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Kentucky, Maryland, Minnesota, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Indiana, or Nebraska, you have similar opt-out rights under your state privacy law. Use the same routes above — we treat these requests equivalently.

Complaints

If you think we haven't handled your request properly, you can file a complaint with the California Attorney General at oag.ca.gov/privacy or with the California Privacy Protection Agency at cppa.ca.gov.

Last Updated: 14 April 2026. Questions? [email protected].