Reference

y300 legal terms for India accounts

At y300, we set out the rules that shape your account, your data, and your access in clear English for India.

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y300 y300 legal terms for India accounts
CONTACT PATHS

Where to send legal requests

If your question is about a rule, a record, or a change to your account data, use one of the routes below.

Email request Send your request from the email linked to your account and say which record or rule you want us to check. We use that thread to confirm ownership, track dates, and answer in writing.
Support form Use the form when you need a copy, correction, or deletion step. Add the account email, the issue date, and any screenshots that help us find the right record faster.
Account chat Chat is useful for a quick point on a clause or deadline. If the matter needs a formal trail, we move it to email and keep the same case references in place.
DATA AND ACCESS

Data and access handling

We treat legal handling as a recordkeeping job, not a slogan. Data stays linked to the purpose you gave, cookie choices stay tied to your device, and security checks appear when logins…

Data purpose

We keep only the data needed to run the account, answer your request, check for fraud, and meet lawful record duties. If the reason for keeping it ends, we remove it or isolate it under our retention rules.

Cookie control

Cookies help us remember sign-in state, language choice, and consent where the rule requires it. You can clear them in your browser, but some settings may need to be set again after that.

Login checks

If a login or change looks unusual, we may ask for extra proof before we touch sensitive details. That step protects you from mistaken edits and reduces the chance of a stranger using your account.

Record retention

Some records stay for a limited time after closure so we can handle disputes, audit work, security checks, and legal duties. Once those reasons end, we remove them or lock them away.

Change requests

To ask for a copy, correction, or deletion step, send the account email, the request type, and any dates that matter. Clear requests move faster because we can match them to the right record.

Contact trail

For legal notices or document requests, use the listed support route and include your name, account email, and the country or state involved. If a matter depends on local law, we say so plainly.

Questions on legal terms

These are the points people usually check before opening an account: which rules apply, how we use records, how to ask for corrections, how long data stays, and where to send a legal request. We keep the answers plain and direct so you can check the details quickly and decide how you want to proceed. If your case depends on local law, we say that at the point where it matters.

Your account is handled under the rules that apply in the place you use it from, together with any local law that controls our service. If two rules differ, we explain which one applies before you continue.

Yes. Send a request through support with your account email and the exact records you want. We may ask for identity checks before we share data so we do not send it to the wrong person.

If you spot a spelling mistake or an old phone number, ask us to correct it from the support path. We will check the record, update it where allowed, and tell you when the change is done.

We keep records only as long as we need them for access checks, dispute handling, security work, or legal duties. After that period, we remove them or lock them away under our retention rules.

If local law changes, we may update the legal text and the way we handle requests. We try to keep the account path clear, and we point you to the new version when it matters.

Use the support route and tell us whether your request is about cookies, access, correction, or deletion. If the matter needs written proof, we shift it to email so you have a record.

Access depends on local law and is available only where local law permits. If a location, payment route, or account status affects what you can see, we say so before you act.