Legal notice

California Privacy Notice

(add this as a new section in your Privacy Policy, after "Your Rights")

If you are a California resident, the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), as amended by the CPRA, gives you additional rights regarding your personal information:

Right to Know — You can request details about the categories and specific pieces of personal information we've collected about you, and the purposes for which it's used.

Right to Delete — You can request that we delete personal information we've collected from you, subject to certain legal exceptions.

Right to Correct — You can request that we correct inaccurate personal information we maintain about you.

Right to Opt Out of Sale/Sharing — We do not sell your personal information. We also do not "share" your information for cross-context behavioral advertising as defined under the CPRA.

Right to Non-Discrimination — We will not deny you goods or services, charge different prices, or provide a different level of service because you exercised any of your CCPA rights.

Categories of Personal Information Collected: Identifiers (name, email, address, phone), commercial information (order history), internet activity (browsing/device data), and payment information (processed by our third-party payment provider — we do not store full card details).

To exercise your rights, contact us at pets@furbank.com with "California Privacy Request" in the subject line. We may need to verify your identity before processing your request.

Shine the Light Law: California residents may also request information once per year about any personal information we've disclosed to third parties for their direct marketing purposes. We do not currently disclose information for this purpose.


Important honest note: CCPA/CPRA legally applies once a business crosses certain thresholds (currently around $25M+ annual revenue, OR buying/selling personal data of 100,000+ consumers/households, OR deriving 50%+ revenue from selling personal info). As a new store, you likely aren't legally required to comply yet — but including this notice anyway is good practice and costs you nothing, and you'll already be covered once you do hit those thresholds. This isn't legal advice; if your business grows significantly, it's worth a real lawyer's review of your CCPA obligations specifically