How we handle your information
This page walks through the lifecycle of personal data on the informational website that discusses 777 Casino. It begins with automatic signals your device sends, continues through optional interactions such as emails, and ends with deletion or anonymisation. Throughout, remember: the licensed gambling operator maintains separate systems for player wallets and verification—we do not merge those datasets casually.
Automatic signals when you load a page
Servers need request metadata to answer HTTP calls. Typical entries include IP address, requested path, status code, bytes served, user-agent string and timestamp. Firewalls may enrich that with threat scores. None of this is collected to sell dossiers about named individuals; it keeps the site reachable and helps block brute-force attempts.
Content delivery networks may cache assets closer to you, logging coarse geography in the process. You can sometimes reduce tracking by using privacy-focused browsers or VPNs, at the cost of occasional captchas.
What happens when you email or submit a form
Your message body, subject line, attachments and headers become records in our mail or ticketing system. We read them to respond, to document complaints, and occasionally to establish defences in disputes. Marketing reuse without fresh consent is off-limits.
Attachments
Metadata in PDFs or images—GPS coordinates, author names—may travel with files. Strip fields before upload unless they are essential.
Cookies: necessary versus optional
Necessary cookies may remember that you dismissed a banner, protect forms with anti-CSRF tokens, or balance sessions across machines. Optional cookies for analytics or advertising should wait for consent where UK PECR rules demand it. Our settings screen, when present, lets you flip choices without hunting through browser menus.
- Session cookies often expire when the browser closes.
- Persistent cookies may last months if they store low-risk preferences.
- Third-party embeds can introduce their own storage; read their notices.
Legal bases in plain English
Legitimate interests cover running a secure site, measuring aggregate performance and handling routine correspondence. Consent covers optional marketing or non-essential tracking. Legal obligation covers court orders and some regulatory requests. Contract applies narrowly if you buy a clearly labelled service directly from us.
Who else sees the data?
Processors such as hosts, email transports, backup vendors and security scanners access personal data only under instruction. We prohibit onward sales. If we integrate a new widget, we assess its privacy posture before launch.
Transfers beyond the United Kingdom
Some subprocessors store replicas abroad. We implement UK-approved transfer tools—standard contractual clauses, adequacy decisions or the UK extension to certified frameworks where valid—and document risk assessments internally.
Retention: not forever by default
Logs rotate quickly unless an incident requires preservation. Ticket threads may persist for years if they relate to active complaints. Aggregated dashboards may outlive row-level records after identifiers drop off.
Security practices you should know about
We enforce HTTPS on public pages where certificates exist, restrict staff permissions, and monitor anomalies. Breaches affecting rights and freedoms trigger notification workflows, including ICO contact when mandatory.
Rights, objections and complaints
UK data subjects may request access, correction, erasure, restriction, objection to legitimate-interest processing, and portability in qualifying cases. Contact the controller listed on this site. Unhappy with our answer? Escalate to the ICO. Automated decisions with legal or similarly significant effects are not a routine part of this property.
Policy changes
When we introduce materially new processing—such as personalised sponsor segments—we update this text and refresh consents if needed. Cosmetic edits may occur without fanfare but should still adjust the “last updated” marker where the template supports it.
