Your US State Privacy Rights
Effective July 11, 2026
Who this covers
Residents of states with comprehensive privacy laws — including California (CCPA/CPRA), Colorado, Connecticut, Virginia, Utah, Texas, and Oregon — have specific enumerated rights over personal information. This page describes how those rights work at Truvace. The practical answer to most of them is simple, because of what we don’t collect in the first place; see the Privacy Policy.
Your rights
Right to know / access. You can request a copy of the personal information we hold about you — for most accounts that is an email address, a display name, and your on-site activity.
Right to delete. You can request deletion of your account and personal information, subject to the permanence of the editorial record described in the Privacy Policy.
Right to correct. You can correct your account information at any time, or ask us to.
Right to opt out of sale, sharing, and targeted advertising. Truvace does not sell personal information, does not share it for cross-context behavioral advertising, and does not run targeted advertising. There is nothing to opt out of; this is the permanent default.
Right to non-discrimination. Exercising any right never changes what you can read — the entire published record is available to everyone, with or without an account.
Sensitive information and profiling
We do not collect sensitive personal information categories (precise geolocation, health data, biometric data) and do not engage in automated-decision profiling of readers.
How to exercise a right
Submit a request via the contact form stating your state of residence and the right you are exercising. We will verify the request against your account email and respond within the period your state’s law requires (45 days in most states, extendable once with notice). You may use an authorized agent; we will verify the agent’s authority before acting.
Appeals
If we decline a request, you may appeal by replying to our decision; appeals are reviewed by a different editor than the original decision. If the appeal fails, your state attorney general’s office accepts complaints.