Effective date: May 12, 2026
This Privacy Policy describes how Zlozarinthryxell.world (“we,” “us,” or “our”) collects, uses, discloses, and protects personal information when you visit zlozarinthryxell.world (the “Site”). The Site is operated from the United States and is intended for a U.S. audience. Site content is informational and educational about evening planning; it is not a healthcare or telehealth service. If you access the Site from another country, your information may be processed in the United States where privacy laws may differ.
Not legal advice. This Policy is provided for transparency. It does not create rights beyond what applicable law provides, and it is not a substitute for legal counsel for your situation.
Notice at collection (U.S. summary)
Certain U.S. state laws require a concise notice when personal information is collected. In the last twelve months we may have collected the categories described in Section 3, used them for the purposes in Section 5, and retained them as described in Section 8. We do not sell your personal information for money, and we do not “share” it for cross-context behavioral advertising in a way that would require an opt-out under applicable law without offering a choice (see our Cookie Policy and cookie banner). We do not offer financial incentives tied to the collection of personal information.
1. Who we are and how to reach us
Mailing address:
Zlozarinthryxell.world
4730 Village Plaza Loop Suite 130
Eugene, OR 97401
United States
Email: connect@zlozarinthryxell.world
Phone: +1 (541) 654-4475
2. Scope and children (COPPA)
The Site offers general lifestyle information about evening checklists and related topics. It is not directed to children under 13 as defined under the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (“COPPA”), and we do not knowingly collect personal information from children under 13. If you are a parent or guardian and believe we have collected personal information from a child under 13, contact us promptly and we will take reasonable steps to delete it.
3. Categories of personal information we may collect
Depending on how you use the Site, we may collect the following categories (labels align with common U.S. state privacy law definitions, including the California Consumer Privacy Act as amended):
- Identifiers: name, email address, and phone number if you choose to provide them (for example, through our contact form or when you email us).
- Commercial information: records of products or services you have obtained from us, if any (this Site is primarily informational).
- Internet or other electronic network activity: browser type, device type, approximate location derived from IP address, pages viewed, referring URLs, and similar technical data collected automatically or through analytics tools if you opt in.
- Inferences: general preferences inferred from how you use the Site (for example, content interests), where permitted by law and technology.
We do not intentionally collect “sensitive personal information” as defined in certain state laws (such as government IDs, precise geolocation, racial or ethnic origin, health diagnosis, or financial account numbers) through ordinary browsing or our standard contact form. Please do not send highly sensitive documents or information by email unless we ask you to.
4. Sources of information
We collect information directly from you (for example, when you submit a form, send email, or call us), automatically through cookies and similar technologies (see our Cookie Policy), and from analytics partners if you opt in to optional analytics technologies.
How forms send data. Our Site forms use the HTTP POST method so that routine submissions (such as your email for the outline or a contact message) are not appended to the page URL the way they would be with a GET request. Data may still be processed by hosting systems, networks, or email providers in the ordinary course of delivery. Do not use web forms for highly sensitive health information unless you accept that risk; you may also reach us by phone or mail as listed above.
Cookie preferences on your device. When you set cookie choices, our script may store a small JSON record in your browser’s localStorage under the key sleepchecklist_cookie_prefs_v1 (and may set data-* attributes on the document for the current session). That record is controlled by your browser until you clear site data.
5. Purposes for processing
- To operate, maintain, and secure the Site;
- To respond to your messages and fulfill requests you initiate;
- To remember your cookie preferences;
- To measure Site performance and improve content if you enable analytics;
- To send marketing communications only if you opt in to marketing cookies and separately provide consent where required.
Commercial promotional email sent to addresses in the United States will follow the federal CAN-SPAM Act where it applies, including identifying the sender, including our postal address, and providing a clear way to opt out of future promotional messages (transactional messages about a request you made may not include marketing).
6. How U.S. law applies to our use of information
Unlike some foreign privacy frameworks, United States privacy law is a patchwork of federal statutes, Federal Trade Commission (“FTC”) guidance, and state consumer privacy laws. Generally, we process personal information because:
- You asked us to or agreed: for example, when you submit a contact form, email us, or accept optional cookies through our banner.
- We need it to run the Site and respond to you: for example, to deliver pages, remember cookie settings, prevent fraud or abuse, and keep records of routine communications.
- We have a legitimate business interest: such as improving content layout, measuring aggregate traffic when you opt in to analytics, and securing our systems—provided we do not override rights given to you by law.
- Law or legal process requires it.
Where state law requires consent for specific processing (for example, certain non-essential cookies or direct marketing), we will seek that consent separately when required. You may withdraw consent you have given (such as by changing cookie settings or asking us to stop certain messages) where withdrawal is technically feasible and consistent with law.
Automated decision-making. We do not use personal information for profiling or solely automated decisions that produce legal or similarly significant effects about you.
7. Disclosure of personal information
We may share information with service providers who assist us with hosting, email delivery, analytics (if enabled), or security. We require service providers to use information only for the services they provide to us. We may disclose information if required by law, legal process, or to protect the rights, safety, and security of users, the public, or our organization.
Sales and sharing. We do not sell your personal information for monetary consideration. We do not “share” personal information for cross-context behavioral advertising in a manner that would require an opt-out under California or similar state laws without providing a choice mechanism (see our cookie banner and this Policy). Nevada residents may submit a verified request to opt out of certain sales of covered information as described in Nevada law; because we do not sell covered information in the ordinary sense, such requests may be informational only.
8. Retention
We retain contact form submissions and related correspondence for as long as needed to respond and for a reasonable period afterward for operational record-keeping (typically up to twenty-four months unless a longer period is required by law). Cookie preference records may be stored locally in your browser. Server logs, if collected, are retained on a rolling basis according to our hosting provider’s configuration.
9. Security
We use commercially reasonable administrative, technical, and organizational measures designed to protect personal information. No method of transmission over the Internet is fully secure; we cannot guarantee absolute security. We aim to align our practices with Federal Trade Commission expectations for transparency, data minimization, and honoring consumer choices where those principles apply to consumer-facing websites.
10. Your U.S. state privacy rights
Depending on where you live, you may have rights under comprehensive U.S. state consumer privacy laws. Examples include the California Consumer Privacy Act as amended by the California Privacy Rights Act, the Virginia Consumer Data Protection Act, the Colorado Privacy Act, the Connecticut Data Privacy Act, the Utah Consumer Privacy Act, and—in our home state—the Oregon Consumer Privacy Act and related rules. Other states continue to adopt similar statutes; your rights depend on the law where you reside.
- The right to confirm whether we process your personal information and to obtain a copy in a portable format, where required;
- The right to know the categories and specific pieces of personal information we collect, use, and disclose;
- The right to request deletion of personal information, subject to statutory exceptions (such as completing a transaction or meeting legal obligations);
- The right to correct inaccurate personal information;
- The right to opt out of certain processing, including sales, targeted advertising, or profiling in some states, where those activities occur and the law applies;
- The right to limit use or disclosure of sensitive personal information in states that provide that right, where we process such information;
- The right to appeal our decision on your request in states that require an appeal process.
How to submit a request. Email connect@zlozarinthryxell.world with Privacy request in the subject line. Describe your request with enough detail for us to understand and verify it. We will verify your identity (or the authority of an agent) in line with applicable law before fulfilling certain requests. You may designate an authorized agent where permitted; we may require signed written permission or other proof.
Response timing. We aim to respond within forty-five (45) days of receiving a verifiable request, unless applicable law allows or requires a different period. If we need more time, we will explain why and how long we expect to take, when the law requires that notice.
Non-discrimination. We will not deny goods or services, charge different prices, or provide a different level of quality solely because you exercised a privacy right, except where the law permits a reasonable difference tied to the value of data (we do not operate such a program on this Site).
California residents (CCPA/CPRA). If you are a California resident, California Civil Code §§ 1798.100 et seq. may provide additional rights. We do not sell or share personal information as those terms are used in the CCPA/CPRA in a way that bypasses the choices described here. We have not sold personal information for monetary consideration in the prior twelve months. If our practices change, we will update this Policy. California’s “Shine the Light” law (Civil Code § 1798.83) allows California residents to ask once per calendar year about certain disclosures of personal information to third parties for those third parties’ direct marketing purposes. We do not disclose personal information to third parties for their direct marketing purposes as described in that statute.
Global Privacy Control and similar signals. When your browser sends the Global Privacy Control (“GPC”) signal and you have not already saved cookie preferences, our Site script keeps optional analytics and marketing off, records that choice in your browser’s local storage, and hides the cookie banner—consistent with opt-out expectations under several U.S. state privacy laws for applicable processing. You can still open Cookie settings from a cleared browser or after clearing site data to change preferences.
Oregon residents. Our operator is located in Oregon. If the Oregon Consumer Privacy Act or related Oregon laws apply to you, you may have rights comparable to those listed above, including appeal rights where required.
If you are dissatisfied with our response where the law provides a right to complain to a regulator, you may contact your state Attorney General or consumer protection office.
11. Aggregated and deidentified information
We may create aggregated or deidentified information that cannot reasonably be linked to you. We may use and disclose such information for any lawful purpose, subject to applicable legal standards for deidentification.
12. International visitors
If you are located outside the United States (for example in the European Economic Area, the United Kingdom, or Switzerland), your country’s laws may apply in addition to U.S. law. We process and store information primarily in the United States. Cross-border transfers, if any, are made in accordance with applicable requirements.
13. Changes
We may update this Privacy Policy from time to time. We will post the updated version on this page and revise the effective date. Material changes may require additional notice under some state laws; where required, we will provide that notice. Continued use of the Site after the effective date may constitute acceptance of the updated Policy where permitted by law.