Reference

India Legal Terms at w0911l6

This page sets out the legal terms that shape how you use w0911l6 in India.

India accessData useCookie settingsAccount changes
w0911l6 India Legal Terms at w0911l6
CONTACT ROUTES

Contact Paths for Legal Requests

If you need a legal reply, use the contact routes below and send the exact account email, phone number or ticket ID that matches your profile.

Email request Send the message from the email tied to your account, mention the legal issue, and add any ticket ID. That gives us a clean trail and helps us verify the account faster.
In-app chat Open chat from inside your account when you need a quick answer on data, access or corrections. We can then see the account context and keep the thread with your case.
Written ticket Use a ticket if your request needs documents, a formal reply or a record you can keep. We route those cases to the team that handles policy and account changes.
DATA CARE

How We Handle Your Records

We handle legal and account data only for the reasons set out here: access control, fraud checks, dispute handling, payment reconciliation and replies to your requests.

Data logs

We record sign-in time, device type, wallet events and support contact details so we can verify account actions and investigate disputes. Those logs are used only for the purposes stated in this policy.

Cookie use

Cookies help us keep you signed in, remember language and preserve security checks during a session. Some are temporary, and some stay longer so your browser can restore a setting you chose.

Session security

If a login looks unusual, we may ask for a second check before the session continues. That protects the account history tied to your profile and helps stop unauthorised changes.

Record retention

We hold records for the period needed for dispute handling, tax duties, fraud checks and any other legal duty. When that period ends, we delete, anonymise or archive the record as required.

Correction requests

To request a change, contact us from the address linked to the account and say exactly what should be corrected. We may ask for proof if the request touches identity or payment history.

Contact trail

Keep the ticket number, chat transcript or email chain until your request is resolved. It gives both sides a clear reference if you need to follow up on the same legal matter.

Legal Questions You Can Ask

These are the questions we expect you to ask when you want to read the policy in plain English. They focus on what data we keep, how long we keep it, how cookies work, who can request a change and what happens if local law limits a feature. If you need a personal reply, use the contact paths in the support section and send the request from the account-linked email.

They cover account access, data use, cookies, record retention, request handling and the checks we may apply before changing sensitive details. If a local rule conflicts with a site rule, the local rule decides what we can offer you.

We use the data you share to verify access, keep the session working, record wallet activity and answer support requests. We also keep logs that help us settle disputes, detect misuse and complete legal checks.

Yes. Send the correction from the email linked to your account and name the field you want changed. If the request affects identity, contact details or payment history, we may ask for a fresh match first.

They do. Cookies keep you signed in, remember basic settings and help us protect the session. Some are temporary, and some stay longer so your browser can restore a preference you chose earlier.

We keep records only as long as needed for dispute handling, security checks, payment reconciliation, tax duties and legal obligations. After that, we delete, anonymise or archive them according to the rule that applies.

Use the contact method below, include your account email or ticket ID and say exactly what you need. That helps us route the request to the right team and keep a written trail of the reply.

Access depends on local law and is available where local law permits. If a state or territory rule changes, we may restrict or adjust access without changing the rest of the policy for lawful regions.