Pri­va­cy Policy

 

Name and con­tact infor­ma­tion of the Con­troller pur­suant to Arti­cle 4 (7) GDPR

Com­pa­ny: Prax­is für Psy­chother­a­pie
Address: Dr. Nico Rohlf­ing, Pel­manstraße 46, 45131 Essen
E‑Mail: contact(at)virtuelle-ambulanz.com

Safe­ty and pro­tec­tion of your per­son­al data

We con­sid­er it our pri­ma­ry respon­si­bil­i­ty to pro­tect the con­fi­den­tial­i­ty of the per­son­al infor­ma­tion you pro­vide and to pro­tect it from unau­tho­rized access. That’s why we take the utmost care and use state-of-the-art secu­ri­ty stan­dards to ensure max­i­mum pro­tec­tion of your per­son­al information.

As a pri­vate com­pa­ny, we are sub­ject to the pro­vi­sions of the Euro­pean Gen­er­al Data Pro­tec­tion Reg­u­la­tion (GDPR) and the reg­u­la­tions of the Ger­man Fed­er­al Data Pro­tec­tion Act (BDSG). We have tak­en tech­ni­cal and orga­ni­za­tion­al mea­sures which ensure that data pro­tec­tion reg­u­la­tions are observed by us and by our exter­nal ser­vice providers.

Def­i­n­i­tions

The law requires that per­son­al data be processed law­ful­ly, in good faith and in a man­ner that is trans­par­ent to the data sub­ject (“law­ful­ness, fair­ness, trans­paren­cy”). To ensure this, we would like to inform you of the legal def­i­n­i­tions that are used in this Pri­va­cy Statement:

  1. Per­son­al data

“Per­son­al data” means any infor­ma­tion relat­ing to an iden­ti­fied or iden­ti­fi­able nat­ur­al per­son (here­inafter the “data sub­ject”). A nat­ur­al per­son is con­sid­ered to be iden­ti­fi­able if he or she can be iden­ti­fied direct­ly or indi­rect­ly, in par­tic­u­lar by asso­ci­a­tion with an iden­ti­fi­er such as a name, an iden­ti­fi­ca­tion num­ber, loca­tion data, an online iden­ti­fi­er, or one or more spe­cial fea­tures which express the phys­i­cal, phys­i­o­log­i­cal, genet­ic, men­tal, eco­nom­ic, cul­tur­al or social iden­ti­ty of the nat­ur­al person.

  1. Pro­cess­ing

“Pro­cess­ing” means any oper­a­tion or set of oper­a­tions which is per­formed on per­son­al data, whether or not by auto­mat­ed means, such as col­lec­tion, record­ing, orga­ni­za­tion, struc­tur­ing, stor­age, adap­ta­tion or alter­ation, retrieval, con­sul­ta­tion, use, dis­clo­sure by trans­mis­sion, dis­sem­i­na­tion or oth­er­wise mak­ing avail­able, align­ment or com­bi­na­tion, restric­tion, era­sure or destruction.

  1. Restric­tion of processing

“Restric­tion of pro­cess­ing” means the mark­ing of stored per­son­al data with the aim of lim­it­ing its pro­cess­ing in the future.

  1. Pro­fil­ing

”Pro­fil­ing“ means any form of auto­mat­ed pro­cess­ing of per­son­al data con­sist­ing of the use of per­son­al data to eval­u­ate cer­tain per­son­al aspects relat­ing to a nat­ur­al per­son, in par­tic­u­lar to ana­lyze or pre­dict aspects con­cern­ing that nat­ur­al per­son­’s per­for­mance at work, eco­nom­ic sit­u­a­tion, health, per­son­al pref­er­ences, inter­ests, reli­a­bil­i­ty, behav­ior, loca­tion or movements.

  1. Pseu­do­nymiza­tion

“Pseu­do­nymiza­tion“ means the pro­cess­ing of per­son­al data in such a man­ner that the per­son­al data can no longer be attrib­uted to a spe­cif­ic data sub­ject with­out the use of addi­tion­al infor­ma­tion, pro­vid­ed that such addi­tion­al infor­ma­tion is kept sep­a­rate­ly and is sub­ject to tech­ni­cal and orga­ni­za­tion­al mea­sures to ensure that the per­son­al data is not attrib­uted to an iden­ti­fied or iden­ti­fi­able nat­ur­al person

  1. Fil­ing system

“Fil­ing sys­tem“ means any struc­tured set of per­son­al data which is acces­si­ble accord­ing to spe­cif­ic cri­te­ria, whether cen­tral­ized, decen­tral­ized or dis­persed on a func­tion­al or geo­graph­i­cal basis.

  1. Con­troller

“Con­troller“ means the nat­ur­al or legal per­son, pub­lic author­i­ty, agency or oth­er body which, alone or joint­ly with oth­ers, deter­mines the pur­pos­es and means of the pro­cess­ing of per­son­al data. Where the pur­pos­es and means of such pro­cess­ing are deter­mined by Euro­pean Union or Mem­ber State law, the con­troller or the spe­cif­ic cri­te­ria for its nom­i­na­tion may be pro­vid­ed for by Euro­pean Union or Mem­ber State law.

  1. Proces­sor

“Proces­sor“ means a nat­ur­al or legal per­son, pub­lic author­i­ty, agency or oth­er body which process­es per­son­al data on behalf of the controller.

  1. Recip­i­ent

“Recip­i­ent“ means a nat­ur­al or legal per­son, pub­lic author­i­ty, agency or anoth­er body, to which the per­son­al data is dis­closed, whether a third par­ty or not. How­ev­er, pub­lic author­i­ties which may receive poten­tial­ly per­son­al data in the frame­work of a par­tic­u­lar inquiry in accor­dance with Euro­pean Union or Mem­ber State law shall not be regard­ed as recip­i­ents. The pro­cess­ing of that data by those pub­lic author­i­ties shall be in com­pli­ance with the applic­a­ble data pro­tec­tion rules accord­ing to the pur­pos­es of the processing.

  1. Third par­ty

A “third par­ty“ means a nat­ur­al or legal per­son, pub­lic author­i­ty, agency or body oth­er than the data sub­ject, con­troller, proces­sor and per­sons who, under the direct author­i­ty of the con­troller or proces­sor, are autho­rized to process per­son­al data.

  1. Con­sent

The “con­sent“ of the data sub­ject means any freely giv­en, spe­cif­ic, informed and unam­bigu­ous indi­ca­tion of the data sub­jec­t’s wish­es by which he or she, by a state­ment or by a clear affir­ma­tive action, sig­ni­fies agree­ment to the pro­cess­ing of per­son­al data relat­ing to him or her.

Law­ful­ness of processing

The pro­cess­ing of per­son­al data is only law­ful if there is a legal basis for such pro­cess­ing. Pur­suant to Arti­cle 6 (1) (a) — (f) of the GDPR, the legal basis for the pro­cess­ing may be in particular:

  1. The data sub­ject has giv­en con­sent to the pro­cess­ing of his or her per­son­al data for one or more spe­cif­ic purposes
  2. Pro­cess­ing is nec­es­sary for the per­for­mance of a con­tract to which the data sub­ject is par­ty or in order to take steps at the request of the data sub­ject pri­or to enter­ing into a contract
  3. Pro­cess­ing is nec­es­sary for com­pli­ance with a legal oblig­a­tion to which the con­troller is subject
  4. Pro­cess­ing is nec­es­sary in order to pro­tect the vital inter­ests of the data sub­ject or of anoth­er nat­ur­al person
  5. Pro­cess­ing is nec­es­sary for the per­for­mance of a task car­ried out in the pub­lic inter­est or in the exer­cise of offi­cial author­i­ty vest­ed in the controller
  6. Pro­cess­ing is nec­es­sary for the pur­pos­es of the legit­i­mate inter­ests pur­sued by the con­troller or by a third par­ty, except where such inter­ests are over­rid­den by the inter­ests or fun­da­men­tal rights and free­doms of the data sub­ject which require pro­tec­tion of per­son­al data, in par­tic­u­lar where the data sub­ject is a child.

Infor­ma­tion regard­ing the col­lec­tion of per­son­al data

(1) Below, we inform you of the col­lec­tion of per­son­al data when using our web­site. Per­son­al data is e.g. you name, address, email address­es, user behav­ior, etc.

(2) When con­tact­ing us by email the infor­ma­tion you pro­vide (your email address and, if applic­a­ble, your name and your tele­phone num­ber) is stored by us in order to answer your ques­tions. We delete the data col­lect­ed in this man­ner once stor­age is no longer required, if pro­cess­ing is restrict­ed, or in the event that legal reten­tion oblig­a­tions exist.

Col­lec­tion of per­son­al data when vis­it­ing our website

When you mere­ly use the web­site for infor­ma­tion­al pur­pos­es, i.e. if you do not reg­is­ter or oth­er­wise pro­vide infor­ma­tion to us, we only col­lect the per­son­al data that your brows­er trans­mits to our serv­er. If you wish to view our web­site, we col­lect the fol­low­ing data which is tech­ni­cal­ly nec­es­sary for us to dis­play our web­site to you and to ensure its sta­bil­i­ty and secu­ri­ty (here, the legal basis is Arti­cle 6 (1) (f) GDPR):

– IP address
– date and time of the request
– time zone dif­fer­ence to Green­wich Mean Time (GMT)
– con­tent of the request (spe­cif­ic page)
– access status/HTTP sta­tus code
– each trans­mit­ted vol­ume of data
– web­site from which the request orig­i­nates
– brows­er
– oper­at­ing sys­tem and its user inter­face
– lan­guage and ver­sion of the brows­er software

Use of Cookies

(1) In addi­tion to the afore­men­tioned data, cook­ies are stored on your com­put­er when you use our web­site. Cook­ies are small text files that are stored on your hard dri­ve and that are assigned to the brows­er you are using and that pro­vide cer­tain infor­ma­tion to the enti­ty that sets the cook­ie. Cook­ies can­not exe­cute pro­grams or trans­mit virus­es to your com­put­er. They help make inter­net offer­ings over­all more user-friend­ly and effective.

(2) This web­site uses the fol­low­ing types of cook­ies, whose scope and func­tion are explained below:

– Tran­sient cook­ies (see a.)
– Per­sis­tent cook­ies (see b.).

  1. Tran­sient cook­ies are auto­mat­i­cal­ly delet­ed when you close the brows­er. These include in par­tic­u­lar ses­sion cook­ies. These store what is known as a ses­sion ID, with which var­i­ous requests from your brows­er can be assigned to a com­mon ses­sion. This per­mits your com­put­er to be rec­og­nized when you return to our web­site. Ses­sion cook­ies are delet­ed when you log out or close the browser.
  2. Per­sis­tent cook­ies are auto­mat­i­cal­ly delet­ed after a spec­i­fied peri­od, which may dif­fer depend­ing on the cook­ie. You can delete the cook­ies at any time from with­in the secu­ri­ty set­tings of your browser.
  3. You can con­fig­ure your brows­er set­ting to match your pref­er­ences and e.g. decline to accept third-par­ty cook­ies or all cook­ies. “Third-par­ty cook­ies” are cook­ies that have been set by a third par­ty and there­fore not by the actu­al web­site which you cur­rent­ly are on. Please note that dis­abling cook­ies may not enable you to use all fea­tures of this website.
  4. If you have an account with us, we use cook­ies to iden­ti­fy you when you re-vis­it us. Oth­er­wise, you would have to log in again each time you vis­it us.

More fea­tures and offer­ings on our website

(1) In addi­tion to the pure­ly infor­ma­tion­al use of our web­site, we offer var­i­ous ser­vices that you can use if you are inter­est­ed. To do this, you will gen­er­al­ly need to pro­vide oth­er per­son­al infor­ma­tion that we use to pro­vide the ser­vice and to which the afore­men­tioned data pro­cess­ing prin­ci­ples apply.

(2) In part, we use exter­nal ser­vice providers to process your data. These have been care­ful­ly select­ed and com­mis­sioned by us, are bound by our instruc­tions, and are reg­u­lar­ly inspected.

(3) Fur­ther­more, we may dis­close your per­son­al data to third par­ties if par­tic­i­pa­tion in pro­mo­tion­al cam­paigns, sweep­stakes, con­tracts or sim­i­lar ser­vices are offered by us in con­junc­tion with our part­ners. Fur­ther infor­ma­tion will be avail­able at the time you enter your per­son­al infor­ma­tion or at the bot­tom of the descrip­tion of the respec­tive offer.

(4) Inso­far as our ser­vice providers or part­ners are based in a coun­try out­side the Euro­pean Eco­nom­ic Area (EEA), we will inform you of the con­se­quences of this in the descrip­tion of the offer.

Minors

Our offer is basi­cal­ly aimed at peo­ple who have reached the age of 16. Per­sons under the age of 16 should not sub­mit any per­son­al infor­ma­tion to us with­out the con­sent of their par­ent or legal guardian.

Rights of data sub­jects
(1) Revo­ca­tion of consent

If your per­son­al data is processed on the basis of con­sent which you have giv­en us, you have the right to revoke your con­sent at any time. The revo­ca­tion of con­sent does not affect the legal­i­ty of the pro­cess­ing per­formed on the basis of the con­sent until the time of revocation.

You can con­tact us at any time to exer­cise your right to revoke consent.

(2) Right to confirmation

You have the right to request con­fir­ma­tion from the con­troller that we are pro­cess­ing per­son­al data con­cern­ing you. You can request this con­fir­ma­tion at any time using the con­tact details above.

(3) Right to information

In the event that per­son­al data is processed, you can request infor­ma­tion about this per­son­al data and the fol­low­ing infor­ma­tion at any time:

  1. the pur­pos­es of the pro­cess­ing
    b. the cat­e­gories of per­son­al data being processed
    c. the recip­i­ents or cat­e­gories of recip­i­ents to whom the per­son­al data has been or is being dis­closed, in par­tic­u­lar in the case of recip­i­ents in third coun­tries or inter­na­tion­al orga­ni­za­tions
    d. if pos­si­ble, the planned dura­tion for which the per­son­al data is stored or, if this is not pos­si­ble, the cri­te­ria for deter­min­ing this dura­tion
    e. the exis­tence of a right to rec­ti­fi­ca­tion or era­sure of the per­son­al data con­cern­ing you, or to a restric­tion of pro­cess­ing by the con­troller or a right to object to such pro­cess­ing
    f. the exis­tence of a right to lodge a com­plaint with a super­vi­so­ry author­i­ty
    g. if the per­son­al data is not col­lect­ed from the data sub­ject, all avail­able infor­ma­tion on the source of the data
    h. the exis­tence of auto­mat­ed deci­sion-mak­ing, includ­ing pro­fil­ing, in accor­dance with Arti­cle 22 (1) and (4) GDPR and, at least in these cas­es, mean­ing­ful infor­ma­tion about the log­ic involved and the scope and intend­ed impact of such pro­cess­ing on the data subject

If per­son­al data is trans­ferred to a third coun­try or to an inter­na­tion­al orga­ni­za­tion, you have the right to be informed of the appro­pri­ate safe­guards under Arti­cle 46 of the GDPR in con­nec­tion with the trans­fer. We pro­vide a copy of the per­son­al data that is the sub­ject of the pro­cess­ing. For any addi­tion­al copies you request of a per­son, we may charge a rea­son­able fee based on our admin­is­tra­tive costs. If your request is sub­mit­ted elec­tron­i­cal­ly, the infor­ma­tion must be pro­vid­ed in a stan­dard elec­tron­ic for­mat, unless oth­er­wise stat­ed. The right to receive a copy under para­graph 3 shall not affect the rights and free­doms of others.

(4) Right to rectification

You have the right to demand the imme­di­ate cor­rec­tion of incor­rect per­son­al data con­cern­ing you. Tak­ing into account the pur­pos­es of pro­cess­ing, you have the right to request the com­ple­tion of incom­plete per­son­al data, includ­ing by means of a sup­ple­men­tary statement.

(5) Right to era­sure (“right to be forgotten“)

You have the right to demand that the con­troller erase per­son­al data con­cern­ing you with­out undue delay, and we are oblig­at­ed to erase per­son­al data with­out undue delay where one of the fol­low­ing grounds applies:

  1. the per­son­al data are no longer nec­es­sary in rela­tion to the pur­pos­es for which they were col­lect­ed or oth­er­wise processed
    b. the data sub­ject with­draws the con­sent on which the pro­cess­ing is based accord­ing to point (a) of Arti­cle 6(1), or point (a) of Arti­cle 9(2), and there is no oth­er legal ground for the pro­cess­ing
    c. the data sub­ject objects to the pro­cess­ing pur­suant to Arti­cle 21(1) GDPR and there are no over­rid­ing legit­i­mate grounds for the pro­cess­ing, or the data sub­ject objects to the pro­cess­ing pur­suant to Arti­cle 21(2) GDPR;
    d. the per­son­al data have been unlaw­ful­ly processed
    e. per­son­al data must be erased for com­pli­ance with a legal oblig­a­tion in Union or Mem­ber State law to which the con­troller is sub­ject
    f. the per­son­al data was col­lect­ed in rela­tion to the offer of infor­ma­tion soci­ety ser­vices referred to in Arti­cle 8(1) GDPR

If the con­troller has made the per­son­al data pub­lic and is oblig­ed pur­suant to para­graph 1 to erase the per­son­al data, the con­troller, tak­ing account of avail­able tech­nol­o­gy and the cost of imple­men­ta­tion, shall take rea­son­able steps, includ­ing tech­ni­cal mea­sures, to inform con­trollers which are pro­cess­ing the per­son­al data that the data sub­ject has request­ed the era­sure by such con­trollers of any links to, or copy or repli­ca­tion of, that per­son­al data. The right to era­sure (“right to be for­got­ten“) does not apply to the extent that the pro­cess­ing is necessary:

– to exer­cise the right of free­dom of expres­sion and infor­ma­tion
– for com­pli­ance with a legal oblig­a­tion which requires pro­cess­ing by Union or Mem­ber State law to which the con­troller is sub­ject or for the per­for­mance of a task car­ried out in the pub­lic inter­est or in the exer­cise of offi­cial author­i­ty vest­ed in the con­troller
– for rea­sons of pub­lic inter­est in the area of pub­lic health in accor­dance with points (h) and (i) of Arti­cle 9(2) as well as Arti­cle 9(3) GDPR
– for archiv­ing pur­pos­es in the pub­lic inter­est, sci­en­tif­ic or his­tor­i­cal research pur­pos­es or sta­tis­ti­cal pur­pos­es in accor­dance with Arti­cle 89(1) GDPR in so far as the right referred to in para­graph 1 is like­ly to ren­der impos­si­ble or seri­ous­ly impair the achieve­ment of the objec­tives of that pro­cess­ing; or
– for the estab­lish­ment, exer­cise or defense of legal claims

(6) Right to restric­tion of processing

You have the right to request that we restrict the pro­cess­ing of your per­son­al data if any of the fol­low­ing con­di­tions apply:

  1. the accu­ra­cy of the per­son­al data is con­test­ed by the data sub­ject, for a peri­od enabling the con­troller to ver­i­fy the accu­ra­cy of the per­son­al data
    b. the pro­cess­ing is unlaw­ful and the data sub­ject oppos­es the era­sure of the per­son­al data and requests the restric­tion of their use instead
    c. the con­troller no longer needs the per­son­al data for the pur­pos­es of the pro­cess­ing, but the data is required by the data sub­ject for the estab­lish­ment, exer­cise or defense of legal claims, or
    d. the data sub­ject has object­ed to pro­cess­ing pur­suant to Arti­cle 21(1) GDPR pend­ing the ver­i­fi­ca­tion whether the legit­i­mate grounds of the con­troller over­ride those of the data subject

In the event that pro­cess­ing has been restrict­ed under the afore­men­tioned con­di­tions, this per­son­al data shall – with the excep­tion of stor­age – only be processed with the data subject’s con­sent or for the estab­lish­ment, exer­cise or defense of legal claims or for the pro­tec­tion of the rights of anoth­er nat­ur­al or legal per­son or for rea­sons of impor­tant pub­lic inter­est of the Union or of a Mem­ber State.

In order to exer­cise the right to restrict pro­cess­ing, the data sub­ject may con­tact us at any time using the con­tact details pro­vid­ed above.

(7) Right to data portability

You have the right to receive the per­son­al data con­cern­ing you which you have pro­vid­ed to us in a struc­tured, com­mon­ly used and machine-read­able for­mat and have the right to trans­mit that data to anoth­er con­troller with­out hin­drance from the con­troller to which the per­son­al data have been pro­vid­ed, to the extent that:

  1. the pro­cess­ing is based on con­sent pur­suant to point (a) of Arti­cle 6 (1) or point (a) of Arti­cle 9 (2) or on a con­tract pur­suant to point (b) of Arti­cle 6 (1) GDPR and
    b. the pro­cess­ing is car­ried out by auto­mat­ed means

In exer­cis­ing your right to data porta­bil­i­ty pur­suant to para­graph 1, you have the right to have the per­son­al data trans­mit­ted direct­ly from one con­troller to anoth­er, to the extent that this is tech­ni­cal­ly fea­si­ble. The exer­cise of the right to data porta­bil­i­ty does not affect your right to era­sure (“right to be for­got­ten”). That right shall not apply to pro­cess­ing nec­es­sary for the per­for­mance of a task car­ried out in the pub­lic inter­est or in the exer­cise of offi­cial author­i­ty vest­ed in the controller.

(8) Right to object

You have the right to object, on grounds relat­ing to your par­tic­u­lar sit­u­a­tion, at any time to pro­cess­ing of per­son­al data which con­cerns you which is based on point (e) or (f) of Arti­cle 6 (1) GDPR, includ­ing pro­fil­ing based on those pro­vi­sions. If objec­tion is made, the con­troller will no longer process the per­son­al data unless the con­troller demon­strates com­pelling legit­i­mate grounds for the pro­cess­ing which over­ride the inter­ests, rights and free­doms of the data sub­ject or for the estab­lish­ment, exer­cise or defense of legal claims.

In the event that per­son­al data is processed for direct mar­ket­ing pur­pos­es, you have the right to object at any time to pro­cess­ing of per­son­al data con­cern­ing you for such mar­ket­ing. This also applies to pro­fil­ing to the extent that it is relat­ed to such direct mar­ket­ing. If you object to pro­cess­ing for direct mar­ket­ing pur­pos­es, your per­son­al data shall no longer be processed for such purposes.

Regard­ing the use of infor­ma­tion soci­ety ser­vices, and notwith­stand­ing Direc­tive 2002/58/EC, you can exer­cise your right to object by auto­mat­ed means using tech­ni­cal specifications.

Where per­son­al data are processed for sci­en­tif­ic or his­tor­i­cal research pur­pos­es or sta­tis­ti­cal pur­pos­es pur­suant to Arti­cle 89 (1), you, on grounds relat­ing to your par­tic­u­lar sit­u­a­tion, have the right to object to pro­cess­ing of per­son­al data con­cern­ing you, unless the pro­cess­ing is nec­es­sary for the per­for­mance of a task car­ried out for rea­sons of pub­lic interest.

The right of objec­tion can be exer­cised at any time by con­tact­ing the respec­tive controller.

(9) Auto­mat­ed indi­vid­ual deci­sion-mak­ing, includ­ing profiling

You have the right not to be sub­ject to a deci­sion based sole­ly on auto­mat­ed pro­cess­ing, includ­ing pro­fil­ing, which pro­duces legal effects for you or sim­i­lar­ly sig­nif­i­cant­ly affects you. This does not apply if the decision:

  1. is nec­es­sary for enter­ing into, or per­for­mance of, a con­tract between the data sub­ject and a data con­troller
    b. is autho­rized by Union or Mem­ber State law to which the con­troller is sub­ject and which also lays down suit­able mea­sures to safe­guard the data subject’s rights and free­doms and legit­i­mate inter­ests, or
    c. is based on the data subject’s explic­it consent

The con­troller shall imple­ment suit­able mea­sures to safe­guard the data subject’s rights and free­doms and legit­i­mate inter­ests, at least the right to obtain human inter­ven­tion on the part of the con­troller, to express his or her point of view and to con­test the decision.

This right can be exer­cised by the data sub­ject at any time by con­tact­ing the respec­tive controller.

(10) Right to lodge a com­plaint with a super­vi­so­ry authority

You also have the right, with­out prej­u­dice to any oth­er admin­is­tra­tive or judi­cial rem­e­dy, to lodge a com­plaint with a super­vi­so­ry author­i­ty, in par­tic­u­lar in the Mem­ber State of your habit­u­al res­i­dence, place of work or place of the alleged infringe­ment if you as data sub­ject con­sid­er that the pro­cess­ing of per­son­al data relat­ing to you infringes this Regulation.

(11) Right to effec­tive judi­cial remedy

With­out prej­u­dice to any oth­er avail­able admin­is­tra­tive or judi­cial rem­e­dy, includ­ing the right to lodge a com­plaint with a super­vi­so­ry author­i­ty pur­suant to Arti­cle 77 GDPR, you have the right to an effec­tive judi­cial rem­e­dy if you con­sid­er that your rights under this Reg­u­la­tion have been infringed as a result of the pro­cess­ing of your per­son­al data in breach of this Regulation.

Exis­tence of auto­mat­ed decision-making

We refrain from auto­mat­ic deci­sion-mak­ing or profiling.

Mittwald CM Ser­vice GmbH & Co.KG

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