Your GDPR Rights
This page summarizes rights available under the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and UK GDPR when they apply to our processing of your personal data as a living individual.
Deceased persons
GDPR protects living individuals. It does not generally apply to data about deceased persons (Recital 27). Information about your ancestors used solely to build your private guides is processed as part of your account relationship; rights below apply to your own personal data (account, billing, preferences), not to independent privacy claims on behalf of the deceased under GDPR.
Right of access
You can request a copy of the personal data we hold about you. Self-service: download a structured JSON export from Account → Privacy & Data (export omits large internal fields by design; contact us if you need a complete manual review).
Right to rectification
If account details are wrong, update them where the product allows or email us. We will correct inaccurate personal data without undue delay.
Right to erasure (“right to be forgotten”)
You may request deletion of your account and associated personal data. Self-service: start the deletion flow from Account; you must confirm via the link we send by email. Completion removes guides, uploads, and anonymizes your user record as implemented in our deletion pipeline.
Right to data portability
Where processing is based on contract or consent and technically feasible, you may receive your personal data in a machine-readable form using the same JSON export as for access.
Right to object
You may object to processing based on legitimate interests, including analytics. Use the analytics opt-out in Account settings, or contact us to object to other processing where applicable.
Right to restriction of processing
You may ask us to restrict processing in certain cases (e.g. while we verify accuracy or the lawfulness of processing). Email us with your request and we will respond within GDPR timelines.
Who to contact
For all GDPR requests and questions: andrewprimary@gmail.com. We may ask reasonable questions to verify your identity before disclosing or changing data.
You also have the right to lodge a complaint with your local supervisory authority.