Privacy Policy

Privacy policy in accordance with GDPR

Also available in: Deutsch Deutsch

Who we are

The address of our website is: https://cybersicherheitsvorfall.at.

Our contact details

Christina Schindlauer
reachable at [email protected]

The protection of your personal data is important to us. We process your data exclusively within the framework of legal provisions (GDPR, Austrian DSG 2000, TKG 2003). Below we inform you about the most important aspects of data processing on our website.

Contact with us

If you contact us by email, the data you provide will be stored for the purpose of processing the request and in case of further questions for a period of 6 months. We will not share this data without your prior consent.

Web analytics

This website uses Umami, a self-hosted, privacy-friendly web analytics tool. Umami collects basic usage data such as page views, session duration, referral sources, and device types – exclusively in anonymized and aggregated form.

No cookies are set, no personal data is collected, and no IP addresses are stored. It is not possible to identify individual users. All collected data is processed exclusively on our own server within the EU and is not shared with third parties.

The legal basis for this processing is Art. 6(1)(f) GDPR (legitimate interest in the statistical analysis of website usage to improve our services).

Embedded content from other websites

Posts on this website may contain embedded content (e.g. videos, images, posts, etc.), which we try to avoid as much as possible. Embedded content from other websites behaves exactly as if the visitor had visited the other website.

These websites may collect data about you, use cookies, embed additional third-party tracking services, and record your interaction with this embedded content, including your interaction with the embedded content if you have an account and are logged in to that website.

Your rights

Regarding your personal data, you generally have the rights to information, rectification, deletion, restriction of processing, data portability, and objection (Art. 15 to 21 GDPR).

If the lawfulness of data processing is based on your consent, you have the right to withdraw consent at any time. The withdrawal does not affect the lawfulness of processing carried out on the basis of consent prior to the withdrawal (Art. 7 para. 3 GDPR).

If you believe that the processing of your data violates data protection law or that your data protection rights have been violated in any other way, you may lodge a complaint with the supervisory authority. In Austria, this is the Austrian Data Protection Authority (Datenschutzbehörde).