Privacy Policy
Last updated: July 12, 2025
This Privacy Policy (“Policy”) describes the types of information Goldstein & Wainer, PLLC (“GW Law”) may collect through our website, www.goldsteinwainer.com (“GW Law Site”).
This Policy describes how GW Law collects, uses, discloses and otherwise processes information, including personal information, from and about users of the GW Law Site. This Policy does not apply to (i) information collected by GW Law or provided to GW Law through other means, for example, in the course of our attorney-client relationships or (ii) information which is protected by confidentiality, attorney-client privilege, or any other similar protections. This Policy does not create an attorney-client relationship with any user of the GW Law Site.
Please note that, for users located in the European Economic Area (“EEA”) or California, the section below titled “Jurisdiction-specific information” provides additional information regarding our privacy practices with respect to your personal information and supplements the other terms of this Policy. In the event of any inconsistency between the statements made in the rest of this Policy and the terms under said section, the terms under said section, to the extent applicable, will take precedent.
Collection
GW Law may collect and use certain information when you voluntarily submit it, automatically when you access or use the GW Law Site, and from other sources, such as third parties (e.g. service providers or other organizations with whom we collaborate on certain activities or events) or publicly available sources. To the extent that any such information identifies or is reasonably capable of being associated with an individual person, it will be considered “personal information” for purposes of this Policy.
Information collected directly from you. The information we collect directly from you on the GW Law Site varies depending on the particular activities carried out, but may include:
• identity information, such as your name and title (“identity information”);
• contact information, such as your email address, phone number, and postal address (“contact information”);
• profile information, such as your username and password (“profile information”); and/or
• marketing and communications information, including your preferences in receiving marketing and other communications from GW Law (“marketing and communications information”).
We may collect this information from you when you fill in online forms on the GW Law Site, such as when you complete the form in the Contact page of our site, when you subscribe to our publications or register for events, or when you otherwise correspond with us through the GW Law Site.
Information collected automatically. As you navigate through and interact with the GW Law Site, we may use automatic data collection technologies to collect certain information about your equipment, browsing actions, and patterns, which may include:
• technical information, such as your IP address, browser type and version, information about your operating system, and information about the device you use to access the GW Law Site, such as device identification number and device type (“technical information”); and/or
• usage information, such as “clickstream” information and other information about how you use the GW Law Site (“usage information”).
As explained in more detail in our Cookie Policy below, GW Law and our service providers collect this information, which may be considered personal information in applicable jurisdictions, using cookies and other technologies. Cookies, which are small data files that are transferred to your hard drive when your browser settings permit, track how and when you use our site in order to, for example, recognize and count the number of users and see what pages they visit on the GW Law Site.
Please see the Choices section below for information about how to manage your cookie preferences.
GW Law may also collect de-identified or aggregated information. Such information may be derived from personal information, but it is not considered personal information since it does not directly or indirectly reveal your identity.
We do not collect any sensitive information, such as information about your race, ethnicity, religious or philosophical beliefs, sex life, sexual orientation, political opinions, trade union membership, information about your health, genetic or biometric data, or information about criminal convictions or offenses (“sensitive information”).
Use and disclosure
We may use and disclose personal information to:
• process and respond to your inquiries and requests;
• register you for events or other activities;
• send you publications, such as newsletters, client alerts, legal, industry, news and policy updates, event/program invitations, and other materials;
• enter into or perform a contract or agreement we may have with you;
• administer and protect our business and the GW Law Site, including to operate, maintain and provide the features and functionality of the GW Law Site, including for data analysis, system maintenance, and market research;
• conduct research and analysis;
• assess and improve the effectiveness of the GW Law Site and our services, publications, events, marketing, and client relationships;
• comply with any court order, law, or legal process, including to respond to any government or regulatory request, to prevent, detect, mitigate and investigate fraud, security breaches or other potentially prohibited or illegal activities, and to otherwise protect the GW Law Site and our employees, users or operations;
• evaluate or conduct a merger, divestiture, restructuring, reorganization, dissolution, or other sale or transfer of some or all of GW Law’s assets, whether as a going concern or as part of bankruptcy, liquidation, or similar proceeding, in which personal information held by GW Law about our GW Law Site users is among the assets transferred;
• for other reasons with your consent; and
• for advertising, marketing, and public relations purposes. You may receive marketing communications from us, for example, if you have requested information or materials from us, registered for or attended an GW Law hosted or sponsored event or program, or subscribed to receive publications or other communications from us. Please see below for examples of parties with whom we may share your personal information and the Choices section below to learn more about your choices with respect to receiving marketing communications from us.
We may disclose the personal information we collect or you provide as described in this Policy:
• for internal purposes, such as for internal administration and to provide you with certain services and offerings;
• to our service providers, advisors, and other third parties we use to support our business, including those that provide mailing or email services, fraud prevention, web hosting, or analytic services;
• with other third-party organizations we may collaborate with on various activities or events, such as with other firms or businesses for co-sponsored events or programs;
• to any competent law enforcement body, regulator, government agency, court or other third party where we believe disclosure is necessary to comply with any court order, law, or legal process, including to respond to any government or regulatory request, and/or where we believe it necessary to protect the rights, property, or safety of GW Law, our clients, or others; or
• to a buyer or other successor in the event of a merger, divestiture, restructuring, reorganization, dissolution, or other sale or transfer of some or all of GW Law’s assets, whether as a going concern or as part of bankruptcy, liquidation, or similar proceeding, in which personal information held by GW Law about GW Law Site users is among the assets transferred.
We may also use and share personal information to fulfill any purpose for which you provide it and/or with your consent, and we may use and share non-personal information without restriction.
Choices
If you do not want information collected through the use of cookies, you can turn off cookies using your browser’s settings. If you disable or refuse cookies, please note that some parts of the site may become inaccessible or not function properly. For more information about our use of cookies and other tracking technologies, please see the Collection section above and our Cookie Policy.
You can ask us to stop sending you marketing messages and other email publications by following the opt-out or unsubscribe links on any such communication. Please note that, if you opt out of receiving such messages or publications, we may still send you emails about other services or offerings you have requested or received from us.
Finally, although most modern browsers include a “Do Not Track” feature, like many other websites, the GW Law Site does not currently respond to such Do Not Track signals at this time.
Third parties
The GW Law Site may contain links to websites not operated by GW Law. This Policy does not apply to such third-party sites, services, or to information collected by any third party, including through any content that may link to or be accessible from the GW Law Site. GW Law is not responsible for the privacy practices or the content of such third parties. For privacy information relating to these other third parties, please consult their privacy policies as appropriate.
In certain circumstances, an event, program, or similar activity accessed through a GW Law Site may be hosted or sponsored with another firm or organization. Should you choose to register electronically for any of these events or submit your information to these third parties, GW Law will have no control over the third party’s use of this information, and this Policy will not apply.
Security and retention
We use reasonable security measures designed to protect personal information collected through the GW Law Site. Unfortunately, the transmission of information via the internet is not completely secure. As such, we cannot guarantee the security of your personal information transmitted to our site.
We will only retain your personal information for as long as reasonably necessary to fulfill the purposes we collected it for, including for the purposes of satisfying any legal, regulatory, tax, accounting or reporting requirements. We may retain your personal information for a longer period if there are valid legal grounds for doing so, for example, in the event of a complaint or if we reasonably believe there is a prospect of litigation in respect to our relationship with you.
To determine the appropriate retention period for personal information, we consider many factors, including the amount, nature and sensitivity of the personal information, the potential risk of harm from unauthorized use or disclosure of your personal information, the purposes for which we process your personal information and whether we can achieve those purposes through other means, and the applicable legal, regulatory, tax, accounting or other requirements.
In some circumstances we will anonymize your personal information (so that it can no longer be associated with you) for research or statistical purposes, in which case we may use this information indefinitely without further notice to you.
Children’s online privacy
The GW Law Site is not intended for children under 18 years of age and we do not knowingly collect personal information from children under 18. If you are under 18, do not use or provide any information on any GW Law Site or on or through any of its features. If we learn we have collected or received personal information from a child under 18 without verification of parental consent, we will delete that information.
Changes to this Policy
We may update this Policy from time to time, so you should review this page periodically. When we change this Policy in a material way, we will update the “Last modified” date at the top of this Policy. Changes to this Policy are effective when they are posted on this page.
Jurisdiction-specific Information
Supplemental information for users located in the EEA/UK
The following terms apply to the extent we process personal information of data subjects in the EEA/UK or data that is otherwise subject to the EU General Data Protection Regulation (2016/679) (“GDPR”) or the UK GDPR, as tailored by the Data Protection Act 2018 (“UK GDPR”) and laws and regulations implementing or supplementing these (“EU Data Protection Law”). The following terms explain how we collect and process data subjects’ personal information as a data controller. We process such personal information in accordance with EU Data Protection Law, to the extent applicable.
Legal basis for processing personal information
GW Law relies on the following legal bases to process the personal information of data subjects located in the EEA/UK:
• Where it is necessary to perform a contract we are about to enter into or have entered into with you.
o This includes, for example, to register you for events or other activities; and to enter into or perform any other contract or agreement we may have with you.
• Where it is necessary for our legitimate interests (or those of a third party) and your interests and fundamental rights do not override those interests.
o This includes, for example, to send you publications, such as newsletters, client alerts and other legal, industry, news and policy updates, event/program invitations, and other materials; to ensure compliance with and to update you about our policies and terms; to process and respond to your inquiries and requests; to administer and protect our business and the GW Law Site, including to operate, maintain and provide the features and functionality of the GW Law Site, such as data analysis, system maintenance, and market research; to conduct research and analysis; to assess and improve the effectiveness of the GW Law Site and our services, publications, events, marketing, and client relationships; to evaluate or conduct a merger, divestiture, restructuring, reorganization, dissolution, or other sale or transfer of some or all of GW Law’s assets, whether as a going concern or as part of bankruptcy, liquidation, or similar proceeding, in which personal information held by GW Law about our GW Law Site users is among the assets transferred; for advertising, marketing, and public relations purposes; and for any other legitimate purpose communicated to you at the time of collection of your personal information.
• Where we need to comply with a legal obligation.
o This includes, for example, to comply with any court order, law, or legal process, including to respond to any government or regulatory request, to prevent, detect, mitigate and investigate fraud, security breaches or other potentially prohibited or illegal activities, and to otherwise protect the GW Law Sites and our employees, users or operations.
• Where you provide your consent.
o This includes, for example, to process and respond to your inquiries and requests; to the extent applicable laws in certain jurisdictions require your consent for advertising, marketing and public relations purposes; and where you otherwise provide us with your valid consent.
Your rights under EU Data Protection Law
Under certain circumstances, you may have certain rights under EU Data Protection Law in relation to your personal information, including to:
• Request access to your personal information, which enables you to receive a copy of the personal information we hold about you and to check that we are lawfully processing it.
• Request correction of the personal information that we hold about you, which enables you to have any incomplete or inaccurate data we hold about you corrected, though we may need to verify the accuracy of the new data you provide to us.
• Request erasure of your personal information, which enables you to ask us to delete or remove personal information where there is no good reason for us continuing to process it. Note, however, that we may not always be able to comply with your request of erasure for specific legal reasons which will be notified to you, if applicable, at the time of your request.
• Object to processing of your personal information where we are relying on our legitimate interests (or those of a third party) and there is something about your particular situation which makes you want to object to processing on this ground as you feel it impacts your fundamental rights and freedoms. In some cases, we may demonstrate that we have compelling legitimate grounds to process your information which override your rights and freedoms. You also have the right to object if we process your personal information for direct marketing purposes.
• Request restriction of processing of your personal information, which enables you to ask us to suspend the processing of your personal information in the following scenarios: (i) if you want us to establish the data’s accuracy; (ii) where our use of the data is unlawful but you do not want us to erase it; (iii) where you need us to hold the data even if we no longer require it as you need it to establish, exercise, or defend legal claims; or (iv) you have objected to our use of your data but we need to verify whether we have overriding legitimate grounds to use it.
• Request the transfer of your personal information to you or to a third party. Note that this right only applies to automated information which you initially provided consent for us to use or where we used the information to perform a contract with you.
• Withdraw consent at any time where we are relying on consent to process your personal information. If you withdraw your consent, we may not be able to provide certain services or offerings to you.
You will not have to pay a fee to access your personal information (or to exercise any of the other rights). However, we may charge a reasonable fee if your request is clearly unfounded, repetitive or excessive. Alternatively, we may refuse to comply with your request under these circumstances.
We may need to request specific information from you to help us confirm your identity and ensure your right to access your personal information (or to exercise any of your other rights). This is a security measure to ensure that personal information is not disclosed to any person who has no right to receive it. We may also contact you to ask you for further information in relation to your request to speed up our response.
We try to respond to all legitimate requests within one month; however, it may take us longer than a month if your request is particularly complex or you have made a number of requests, in which case we will notify you and keep you updated.
We hope that we can resolve any query or concern you raise about our use of your information. EU Data Protection Law also gives you the right to lodge a complaint with your local supervisory authority.
Supplemental information for users residing in California
The following terms apply to the extent we process personal information of users who reside in California (“consumer” or “you”). This supplemental information is being provided under the California Consumer Privacy Act of 2018, as amended (Cal. Civ. Code §§ 1798.100 to 1798.199), and related regulations issued by the California Attorney General and by the California Privacy Protection Agency (“CCPA”).
Supplemental information about collection, use, and disclosure
In the preceding 12 months, GW Law has not sold personal information of consumers.
Consumer rights under California law
Under certain circumstances, you may have certain rights under California law in relation to your personal information, including:
• Access request rights. Under the CCPA, you may have the right to request that GW LAW disclose certain information to you about our collection and use of your personal information over the past 12 months. Once we receive and confirm your verifiable consumer request, we will disclose to you: (i) the categories of personal information we collected about you; (ii) the categories of sources for the personal information we collected about you; (iii) our business or commercial purpose for collecting or selling that personal information (where applicable); (iv) the categories of third parties with whom we share that personal information; (v) the specific pieces of personal information we collected about you; and (vi) if we sold or disclosed your personal information for a business purpose, two separate lists disclosing: (a) sales, identifying the personal information categories that each category of recipient purchased; and (b) disclosures for a business purpose, identifying the personal information categories that each category of recipient obtained.
• Correction request rights. Under the CCPA, you may have the right to request that GW LAW correct inaccurate personal information. Once we receive and confirm your verifiable consumer request, we will correct (and direct our service providers to correct) your personal information from our records, unless an exception applies, in which case we will notify you and identify that exception.
• Deletion request rights. Under the CCPA, you may have the right to request that GW LAW delete personal information that we have collected from you and retained, subject to certain exceptions. Once we receive and confirm your verifiable consumer request, we will delete (and direct our service providers to delete) your personal information from our records, unless an exception applies, in which case we will notify you and identify that exception.
• Non-discrimination. We will not discriminate against you for exercising any of your CCPA rights. Unless permitted by the CCPA we will not: (i) deny you goods or services; (ii) charge you different prices or rates for goods or services; (iii) provide you a different level or quality of goods or services; or (iv) suggest that you may receive a different price or rate for goods or services or a different level or quality of goods or services.
• Opt-out of sale/”sharing” request rights. The CCPA provides a right to opt-out of the sale of personal information, as that term is defined in the statute. Our disclosure of your personal information to third party analytics providers may constitute a sale or “sharing” (which is a term used to address the sharing of information for advertising purposes). To the extent that our use constitutes a sale or sharing of your personal information, you have the right to opt-out opting-out of certain cookies through our cookie preference center. For clarity, we also do not sell the personal information of consumers we know are less than 16 years of age.
• Limit use/disclosure of sensitive personal information request rights. The CCPA provides a right to limit the use and disclosure of sensitive personal information what that use or disclosure is inconsistent with the business purposes permitted in the CCPA. We do not collect sensitive personal information from website visitors. Therefore, this right does not apply.
• California’s “Shine the Light” law. Under California’s “Shine the Light” law (Civil Code Section § 1798.83), GW Law Site users that are California residents may request certain information regarding our disclosure of personal information to third parties for their direct marketing purposes; however, we do not disclose personal information to third parties for their direct marketing purposes.
Only you, or someone legally authorized to act on your behalf, may make a verifiable consumer request related to your personal information. You may only make a verifiable consumer request for access or data portability twice within a 12-month period. The verifiable consumer request must: (i) provide sufficient information that allows us to reasonably verify you are the person about whom we collected personal information or an authorized representative and (ii) describe your request with sufficient detail that allows us to properly understand, evaluate, and respond to it.
We cannot respond to your request or provide you with personal information if we cannot verify your identity or authority to make the request and confirm the personal information relates to you. Making a verifiable consumer request does not require you to create an account with us. We will only use personal information provided in a verifiable consumer request to verify the requestor’s identity or authority to make the request.
We endeavor to respond to a verifiable consumer request within 45 days of its receipt. If we require more time (which may be up to 90 days), we will inform you of the reason and extension period in writing. If we are unable to comply with a request, our response will provide an explanation as to why.
We do not charge a fee to process or respond to your verifiable consumer request unless it is excessive, repetitive, or manifestly unfounded. If we determine that the request warrants a fee, we will tell you why we made that decision and provide you with a cost estimate before completing your request.
Cookie Policy
Last updated: July 12, 2025
Goldstein Wainer, PLLC (“GW Law”) use cookies on our website, www.goldsteinwainer.com (“GW Law Site”). This Cookie Policy provides more information about our use of cookies. By using the GW Law Site, you consent to the use of cookies in accordance with this Cookie Policy. For our European and Californian visitors, when you first visit an GW Law Site, you may have seen a pop-up banner to this effect.
GW Law and our service providers may use cookies and other technologies to gather information about your use of the GW Law Site. A cookie is a small file placed on the hard drive of your computer and web beacons are small electronic files located in GW Law Site pages. These technologies collect and store information about your preferences and enable GW Law to, for example, recognize and count the number of and see what pages they visit on the GW Law Site.
The GW Law Site may use the following categories of cookies and/or similar technologies:
• Strictly necessary cookies, which help a website properly operate and/or provide necessary functions relating to the requested services. These cookies are essential to allow users to navigate a website and use certain features.
• Functionality cookies, which enable helpful but non-essential website functions that improve a user’s experience on a website. By recognizing a user when they return to a website, these cookies may, for example, allow the website to remember that user’s preferences (for example, choice of language or region).
• Performance and analytics cookies, which allow a website and third-party service providers to recognize and count the number of visitors to the website, how long a user spends on a webpage, and other statistical information to help the website operator determine which content is most popular and to improve the performance of the website.
You may refuse to accept browser cookies by activating the appropriate setting on your browser. However, if you select this setting you may be unable to access certain parts of the GW Law Site.
Please note that this Cookie Policy does not apply to, and GW Law is not responsible for, the privacy practices of third-party websites, which may be linked to or accessible from the GW Law Site. GW Law may update this Cookie Policy at any time. You are responsible for periodically visiting the GW Law Site and this Cookie Policy to check for any changes. For more information about cookies, please visit allaboutcookies.org.