Privacy
Policy
Wordpix.com and Wordpix
Solutions certify that all personal information relating to its
clients/members, including page addresses, telephone and fax numbers,
business names and email addresses, will be kept confidential and will not
be released to third parties for commercial purposes without
permission.
We reserve the right to publish
anonymous, aggregate summary information regarding statistics for groups as
a whole as representative numbers, not to include personal or individually
identifiable information.
Legal
Information
All materials contained in the
Wordpix.com web site http://www.wordpix.com
and affiliated sites are copyright Wordpix Solutions. The content
presented herein may not under any circumstances be distributed in any
manner or form without prior written permission from Wordpix Solutions.
Wordpix Solutions and
Wordpix.com services and web content are provided as-is with latest
information available.
No guarantee is made or implied
with regard to the availability or effectiveness of services or products of
companies other than Wordpix.com or Wordpix Solutions, whose information
appears on this site,
Email
/ Spam Policy
Spamming to or from California
e-mail service providers against their policy is a civil offense under
California Business and Professions Code Section 17538.45. If you run a
California-based email service provider, you must notify your customers of
the law and your anti-spam policy in order to be eligible to collect damages
of $50 per message. You should also put a notice similar to the following on
your web pages:
The sending of any
unsolicited email advertising messages to this domain will result in the
imposition of civil liability against you in accordance with California
Business and Professional Code Section 17538.45.
Wordpix.com and Wordpix
Solutions reside in California. The above notice applies. It is against the law to send unsolicited email messages to
this domain or its clients and others listed on this web site.
The Unsolicited
Commercial Electronic Mail Act, if passed by Congress, will require all
unsolicited commercial email to carry a valid return address that would
allow receivers to unsubscribe. Those who do not conform to the UCEMA rules
could be sued for $500 per message, up to $50,000 total, by ISPs and state
attorneys general.
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