Privacy policy
I wrote this page as a plain-language privacy policy summary for users in Bangladesh who read casino reviews, compare offers, and sometimes click through to third-party sites such as 96 Casino. My aim is not to bury the meaning in legal wording. I want to explain what kind of data collection can happen on a review site, why it happens, and what users should understand before they browse, click, or contact the site.
This page applies to the review site itself. It does not replace the privacy rules of any casino, payment provider, app store, analytics platform, or affiliate partner. If you leave this site and open a third-party page, that external page will apply its own privacy policy, cookies notice, and tracking rules.
What information may be collected
Most review sites collect a mix of technical information and interaction data. In practical terms, this usually means the site can see which pages a visitor opened, what type of device or browser was used, the approximate country or region based on network signals, the page that referred the visitor, and the general path taken through the website.
If a user sends a message through a contact form or email address, the site may also receive the information the user includes in that message. That might include a name, email address, and the text of the request. I think it is best to treat contact forms as direct communication and only include the details you actually want to share.
Typical data collection may include
- Browser type and device type
- General location signals such as country
- Pages viewed and time spent on pages
- Referral source, such as a search engine or another website
- Clicks on review links or promotional links
- Messages sent through contact forms or email
Why the site collects this information
I prefer to explain the purpose before the technical terms. A review site usually collects limited data to keep the site running, understand which pages are useful, improve layout and performance, protect the site from abuse, and measure whether visitors actually find the information they came for. Without some basic analytics, it is difficult to know whether users are getting stuck, leaving broken pages, or failing to find the sections they need.
Another reason is commercial tracking. If the site uses affiliate links, it may need to record that a visitor clicked through to a partner website. That does not normally mean the site sees a visitor’s casino password, wallet balance, or private account documents. It usually means the site can track that a click happened and whether it later resulted in a qualifying action.
Cookies and similar technologies
Cookies are small files stored in a browser that help a website remember information about a visit. Some cookies are basic and help the site function properly. Others help with analytics, saved preferences, or affiliate tracking. I think the word cookies sounds harmless, but users should still know that cookies can affect how much browsing behaviour is remembered across visits.
On a review site, cookies may be used to keep the site stable, remember a visitor’s settings, measure page usage, or record that a visitor clicked on a partner offer. Similar tools can also include browser storage, session identifiers, or tracking pixels used for traffic reporting and marketing measurement.
Cookies may be used for
- Basic site performance and page loading
- Remembering user preferences
- Analytics and traffic measurement
- Fraud prevention or security checks
- Affiliate tracking after outbound link clicks
Affiliate disclosure and affiliate tracking
This site may contain affiliate links to third-party platforms. That means if a visitor clicks a tracked link and later completes a qualifying action on the partner site, the review site may receive a commission. I prefer to say this directly because affiliate disclosure belongs inside a privacy explainer, not only on a separate commercial page.
Affiliate tracking usually works through a tagged link, cookie, or similar identifier. In simple language, the system may remember that a user came from this review site before reaching a partner page. That helps the partner recognise where the visitor came from. It does not mean the review site controls the third-party account or sees everything the user does after leaving the site.
Third-party services
Like many content websites, a review site may rely on third-party services to handle traffic measurement, advertising performance, affiliate systems, hosting tools, embedded media, content delivery, security, or form processing. These services are used because they help the site operate, but they can also receive limited technical information as part of that process.
I think it is useful to treat third-party services as separate layers of the site. Even if you never contact the site directly, a browser may still interact with analytics providers, hosting infrastructure, or link-tracking systems when pages load. Once you click away to a casino, app platform, or external advertiser, you are also entering the privacy environment of that outside service.
Generic third-party services may include
- Analytics and traffic reporting tools
- Affiliate network and conversion tracking tools
- Hosting, security, and performance services
- Embedded content or media providers
- Email or form-delivery services
How long information may be kept
Different kinds of information are often kept for different periods. Technical logs may be stored for security, debugging, or traffic reporting. Contact messages may be stored long enough to answer the request or keep a basic record of the conversation. Affiliate tracking records may be stored according to the needs of the affiliate system, fraud checks, or reporting periods.
I do not think users need a complicated retention chart on a summary page, but they should know that not all data disappears immediately after they leave the site. Some records may remain for a reasonable operational period, especially where site security, analytics, or reporting are involved.
How information may be protected
A review site should take ordinary steps to protect the data it controls. In practice, that can include secure hosting, limited access to admin tools, software updates, and sensible handling of form or email data. At the same time, no site should claim perfect security. Internet-based services always carry some level of risk, which is why I believe it is better not to submit unnecessary personal details through a public review site.
If a user is planning to open a casino account, identity documents and payment data should be uploaded only on the official operator’s secure channels, not on a review page or general contact form. That is one of the clearest distinctions I think users should keep in mind.
International users and GDPR
Even though this page is written for users in Bangladesh, some visitors may come from places where privacy laws such as GDPR apply. GDPR is a European data protection framework that gives eligible users rights related to personal information, such as access, correction, deletion, or limits on some types of processing. Whether GDPR applies in a specific case depends on the user’s location and the way the site processes data.
I mention GDPR here because many users recognise the term, but I do not want to overstate it. This page is a practical explainer, not a legal ruling on who qualifies under which law. The important point is that users may have privacy rights depending on where they are and how the site operates, and they can ask reasonable questions about how their information is handled.
Users may ask about
- What personal information has been collected
- Whether incorrect information can be corrected
- Whether some stored information can be deleted
- How cookies and affiliate tracking are used
- Which third-party services receive data
Your choices as a visitor
I think a good privacy policy should not only explain what happens in the background. It should also tell visitors what control they have. In most cases, users can manage cookies through browser settings, limit some tracking through consent tools where provided, clear stored browser data, or choose not to submit personal information through forms.
Visitors can also reduce affiliate tracking by avoiding promotional click-outs if they do not intend to visit a partner site. This will not eliminate all technical logs, but it can reduce how much click-based tracking is attached to outbound partner visits.
What happens when you leave this site
This is one of the most important points on the page. Once a user clicks through to 96 Casino or any other external service, the review site no longer controls the privacy environment. The external platform may set its own cookies, collect account information, ask for verification data, or apply different tracking systems. That means the user should read the external site’s privacy policy separately rather than assume this page continues to apply.
I think this matters especially for Bangladesh users comparing apps, payment pages, and registration offers. A review page can summarise what a platform says, but it cannot stand in for the operator’s own privacy and account rules.
Children and age restrictions
This kind of review site is intended for adults only. It is not meant for children, and it should not knowingly collect personal information from anyone below the legal age for the subject matter discussed on the site. Since the site covers gambling-related content, age caution matters even more than on a general information website.
If someone believes personal data from a minor has been sent through the site, the safer route is to contact the site operator and request review or deletion where appropriate.
Policy updates
Privacy pages may be adjusted over time as site tools, affiliate systems, analytics platforms, or content methods change. That means this privacy policy summary can be updated when the website changes how it handles traffic measurement, cookies, contact forms, or other site functions. I do not think every small wording change needs a dramatic notice, but users should understand that online privacy practices can shift with the operation of the site.
If a visitor wants the most current explanation, the active page on the site should be treated as the latest version of the summary.
My closing summary
I see this privacy policy as a practical guide to how a review site may handle technical information, contact details, cookies, data collection, affiliate tracking, and third-party services. The key idea is straightforward: the site may collect limited browsing and interaction data to function, measure performance, and support affiliate activity, but it does not replace the privacy rules of the casinos or outside services it links to.
For users in Bangladesh, the safest approach is to read review pages with curiosity but also with caution. Use browser controls where needed, be selective about what information you submit, and remember that once you leave the review site, the privacy rules of the external platform take over. That is the clearest way I know to keep this explanation useful and honest.
