Last Updated: December 3, 2024

Accure Research is committed to respecting the privacy of survey respondents and other online users of Accure Research’s services. Accure Research’s Privacy Policy governs the collection, use, retention and security of information gathered from survey respondents and other online users of Accure Research’s services. Accure Research does not disclose any personally identifiable information about survey respondents to third parties, except in reporting the survey responses to Accure Research’s clients or as required by law or legal process. Personally identifiable information means information that individually identifies you, such as your name, address, or email address.

Collected Information

Accure Research collects a wide range of information about survey respondents depending on the information needs of our surveys. For example, survey respondents may be requested to provide certain personally identifiable, financial or demographic information, as well as specific opinions about a variety of goods and services. Responses to all survey questions are completely voluntary. A survey respondent should only provide responses to questions they are comfortable answering and survey respondents may decline to answer any survey question. Accure Research reserves the right to report information gathered through the survey (demographic data, preferences, etc.) to Accure Research’s clients. Any information you voluntarily disclose in the survey may be provided to the commissioner of the survey. Accure Research does not disclose a survey respondent’s personally identifiable information to any clients or third parties other than the commissioner of the survey.

Additional Information From Survey Respondents

Accure Research’s servers automatically recognize a survey respondent’s domain name and IP addresses. No personal information about a survey respondent is revealed in this process. Accure Research may also gather anonymous “traffic data” that does not personally identify a survey respondent, but that may be helpful for marketing purposes or for improving the services Accure Research offers. Accure Research may use cookies on our platform to help us provide panelists with a better experience and to provide quality control and validation functions. No personal information is stored on any cookie that Accure Research uses. You can choose whether to accept cookies by changing the settings on your browser. However, if you choose to disable this function, your experience at our website may be diminished and some features may not work as they were intended.

GDPR Privacy
Legal Basis for Processing Personal Data under GDPR
We may process Personal Data under the following conditions:

Consent: You have given Your consent for processing Personal Data for one or more specific purposes.
Performance of a contract: Provision of Personal Data is necessary for the performance of an agreement with You and/or for any pre-contractual obligations thereof.
Legal obligations: Processing Personal Data is necessary for compliance with a legal obligation to which the Company is subject.
Vital interests: Processing Personal Data is necessary in order to protect Your vital interests or of another natural person.
Public interests: Processing Personal Data is related to a task that is carried out in the public interest or in the exercise of official authority vested in the Company.
Legitimate interests: Processing Personal Data is necessary for the purposes of the legitimate interests pursued by the Company.
In any case, the Company will gladly help to clarify the specific legal basis that applies to the processing, and in particular whether the provision of Personal Data is a statutory or contractual requirement, or a requirement necessary to enter into a contract.

Your Rights under the GDPR
The Company undertakes to respect the confidentiality ofYour Personal Data and to guarantee You can exercise Your rights.

You have the right under this Privacy Policy, and by law if You are within the EU, to:

Request access to Your Personal Data. The right to access, update or delete the information We have on You. Whenever made possible, you can access, update or request deletion of Your Personal Data directly within Your account settings section. If you are unable to perform these actions yourself, please contact Us to assist You. This also enables You to receive a copy of the Personal Data We hold about You.
Request correction of the Personal Data that We hold about You. You have the right to to have any incomplete or inaccurate information We hold about You corrected.
Object to processing of Your Personal Data. This right exists where We are relying on a legitimate interest as the legal basis for Our processing and there is something about Your particular situation, which makes You want to object to our processing of Your Personal Data on this ground. You also have the right to object where We are processing Your Personal Data for direct marketing purposes.
Request erasure of Your Personal Data. You have the right to ask Us to delete or remove Personal Data when there is no good reason for Us to continue processing it.
Request the transfer of Your Personal Data. We will provide to You, or to a third- party You have chosen, Your Personal Data in a structured, commonly used, machine-readable format. Please note that this right only applies to automated information which You initially provided consent for Us to use or where We used the information to perform a contract with You.
Withdraw Your consent. You have the right to withdraw Your consent on using your Personal Data. If You withdraw Your consent, We may not be able to provide You with access to certain specific functionalities of the Service.
Exercising of Your GDPR Data Protection Rights
You may exercise Your rights of access, rectification, cancellation and opposition by contacting Us. Please note that we may ask You to verify Your identity before responding to such requests. If You make a request, We will try our best to respond to You as soon as possible.

You have the right to complain to a Data Protection Authority about Our collection and use of Your Personal Data. For more information, if You are in the European Economic Area (EEA), please contact Your local data protection authority in the EEA.

For US residents,US state Laws.

California Privacy Rights Act

 It is about a privacy and data protection law in California. For the other California law also abbreviated CPRA.

he California Privacy Rights Act of 2020 (CPRA), also known as Proposition 24, is a California ballot proposition that was approved by a majority of voters after appearing on the ballot for the general election on November 3, 2020. This proposition expands California's consumer privacy law and builds upon the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) of 2018, which established a foundation for consumer privacy regulations.

The CPRA enshrines more provisions in California state law, allowing consumers to prevent businesses from sharing their personal data, correct inaccurate personal data, and limit businesses' usage of "sensitive personal information," which includes precise geolocation, race, ethnicity, religion, genetic data, private communications, sexual orientation, and specified health information. The California Privacy Protection Agency was established to implement and enforce state privacy laws, investigate violations, and assess penalties of violators.The CPRA also removes the set time period in which businesses can correct violations without penalty, prohibits businesses from holding onto personal data for longer than necessary, triples the maximum fines for violations involving children under the age of 16 (up to $7,500), and authorizes civil penalties for the theft of specified login information.

The CPRA took effect on January 1, 2023, applying to personal data collected on or after January 1, 2022. The law cannot be repealed by state legislature, and any amendments made must be “consistent with and further the purpose and intent” of the Act.

Virginia Consumer Data Protection Act

The Virginia Consumer Data Protection Act (VCDPA) was signed into law in March 2021, and came into effect on January 1st, 2023, the same day as California’s Consumer Privacy Rights Act (CPRA), that state’s second data privacy law.

The VCDPA is a comprehensive state-level privacy legislation that protects personal data belonging to the 8.7 million residents of Virginia. The VCDPA governs the collection and processing of consumers’ data, including their consent to — or opting out of — its use and requests relating to consumers’ privacy rights.

Utah Consumer Privacy Act

The Utah Consumer Privacy Act (UCPA) is a U.S. state-level data privacy law that protects the personal information of residents of Utah. Considered a more business-friendly law, the UCPA provides rights to consumers, outlines obligations for businesses, and describes penalties for noncompliance.

 

  • Consent: An affirmative act by a consumer that unambiguously indicates the consumer’s voluntary and informed agreement to allow a person to process personal data related to the consumer.
  • Consumer: An individual who is a resident of the state acting in an individual or household context.

     

    • It does not include an individual acting in an employment or commercial context.
  • Controller: A person doing business in the state who determines the purposes for which and the means by which personal data are processed, regardless of whether the person makes the determination alone or with others.
  • Personal data: Information that is linked or reasonably linkable to an identified individual or an identifiable individual.

     

    • It does not include deidentified data, aggregated data, or publicly available information.
  • Process: An operation or set of operations performed on personal data, including collection, use, storage, disclosure, analysis, deletion, or modification of personal data.
  • Processor: A person who processes personal data on behalf of a controller.
  • Sensitive data: Personal data that reveals:

     

    • An individual’s racial or ethnic origin;
    • An individual’s religious beliefs;
    • An individual’s sexual orientation;
    • An individual’s citizenship or immigration status; or
    • Information regarding an individual’s medical history, mental or physical health condition, or medical treatment or diagnosis by a health care professional; the processing of genetic personal data or biometric data, if the processing is for the purpose of identifying a specific individual; or specific geolocation data.
    • It does not include personal data that reveals an individual’s racial or ethnic origin, if the personal data are processed by a video communication service; or if the personal data are processed by a person licensed to provide health care under Title 26, Chapter 21, Health Care Facility Licensing and Inspection Act, or Title 58, Occupations and Professions, information regarding an individual’s medical history, mental or physical health condition, or medical treatment or diagnosis by a health care professional.

The Connecticut Data Privacy Act

This privacy is designed for the residents of Connecticut so that they can take full advantage of data protection. Following Governor Med Lamount’s signing, it will go into effect on July 1, 2023. 

State law commands that anyone accomplishing business in Connecticut who has access to the personal information of residents of the state must notify those people if there has been a security violation. A person’s name and any of the following numbers are considered personal information under the law.

To ensure privacy protection services are provided to the citizens of Connecticut, suitable measures are taken. Connecticut’s privacy legislation applies to companies that: 

  • Conduct business inside the state and offer goods or services to the inhabitants of the state.
  • 25,000 or more customers’ data is under their control or processing, and the selling of personal data accounts for more than 25% of their total income.

The Connecticut Data Privacy Act (CTDPA) gives businesses 45 days to respond to an appropriate customer complaint. Businesses are given a right to remedy that expires after 18 months, as well as requirements related to data governance and performing data protection assessments, among others, including names, addresses, social security numbers, and financial data. The requirements also include data governance and performing data protection assessments.

  • Give examples of the kinds of personal information they collect: Businesses must be aware of the types of personal information they collect from customers and employees. 
  • Put data defense safeguards in place: Businesses must create and maintain the proper administrative, technological, and physical measures to protect customer information.
  • Create a methodology for reporting data infringements: In the case of a data breach, enterprises must have a procedure for publicizing affected parties.
  • Individuals should have access to their personal data: Individuals must be able to view, revamp, and vacate their personal information from businesses.
  • Obtain permission: Before accumulating, using, or revealing a person’s personal information, businesses must have that person’s express permission.
  • Privacy notifications should be given: Businesses are required to provide customers with simple privacy statements that describe how they gather and use customer data.
  • Choose a privacy officer: Businesses must designate a privacy officer who is in charge of monitoring CDPA subordination.
  • Make a privacy officer selection: Employers must teach staff members about the commitments of the CDPA and how to comply with them.

 

Data Transfer

   Our compay store all data in our US server.

Opt-Out

Accure Research honors respondents’ requests to be excluded from marketing solicitations. To be removed from this mailing list, simply email your request to support@inservmmr.com.

Protecting Respondent Information

Accure Research is committed to handling the personal information and data of survey respondents with care and integrity. Accure Research uses industry standard security practices to protect such information and data. However, regardless of the security protections and precautions Accure Research undertakes, there is always a risk that personal data may be viewed and used by unauthorized third parties as a result of collecting and transmitting your data through the Internet.

Disputes Concerning Privacy Policy

If you have any complaint concerning how Accure Research has handled your personal information, please contact Accure Research immediately and Accure Research will make every reasonable effort to address and resolve your concerns.

Compliance

By signing up to and participating in the Accure Research panel, you agree to Accure Research’s privacy policy and terms of use.

Contact Information

If you have questions about Accure Research’s Privacy Policy, Accure Research ‘s practices related to the handling of data from survey respondents, or if you would like to have Accure Research remove your information from our database, please feel free to contact Accure Research at:

Accure Research LLC
2205 NW Market St
Seattle, WA 98107
United States 

E-mail: Our DPO Officer:William Martin,DPO@inservmmr.com & Or reach our support Team:Support@inservmmr.com