No-sale pledge

TL;DR: CookieVault will never sell, rent, lease, share for cross-context advertising, or otherwise monetize your data. This is a permanent, enforceable commitment covering every user and every data category — not a temporary marketing line — and it binds any future acquirer.

The no-sale pledge is CookieVault’s permanent, public commitment never to sell, rent, lease, share for cross-context advertising, or otherwise monetize user data for value. It exists because the browser-extension and cookie-tooling space has a long history of products being acquired and quietly turned into data-collection vehicles — so a privacy-first product needs to say, plainly and durably, that it will not do that.

Scope of the pledge

In short: The pledge covers every user (Free, Pro, Team) and every data category we touch — the email and billing IDs we can read, and the encrypted blobs we cannot. There are no carve-outs for “anonymized,” “aggregated,” or “de-identified” data.

Everything the pledge covers:

  • Cookie contents — already end-to-end encrypted, and never sold or shared regardless
  • Account email — never sold, rented, or shared for advertising
  • Billing identifiers — the Paddle customer ID and related metadata
  • Support correspondence — never mined or monetized
  • Aggregate analytics — cookieless and aggregate-only, and never sold even in summary form
  • Any “de-identified” derivative — explicitly in scope, because de-identification is the usual loophole

There is no asterisk for “anonymized” data, because re-identification of supposedly anonymous datasets is well documented and we will not lean on that fiction.

What “sale” means

In short: We adopt the broad CCPA definition — any disclosure of personal data to a third party for monetary or other valuable consideration — and explicitly include the indirect arrangements (licensing, lookalike audiences, ad bidding, cohort sales) that companies use to monetize data without calling it a sale.

PracticeCounts as a “sale/share” under our pledge?
Selling data to a data brokerYes — prohibited
Licensing data for a feeYes — prohibited
Lookalike-audience export to adsYes — prohibited
Programmatic ad bidding with dataYes — prohibited
”Anonymized” cohort saleYes — prohibited
Sharing for cross-context adsYes — prohibited

We use the CCPA’s deliberately broad framing, which defines a “sale” to include releasing, disclosing, or otherwise communicating personal information for “monetary or other valuable consideration.”1 The CPRA amendment separately added “sharing” for cross-context behavioral advertising, and our pledge covers that too.2

Permitted disclosures

In short: Exactly three, and none is a sale: Paddle for billing, Cloudflare for hosting and transit, and lawful compulsion by a valid court order. We never receive value for any of these, and we resist overbroad demands.

The complete list of disclosures we do make:

  1. Paddle — to process payments and tax as our Merchant of Record
  2. Cloudflare — to host the service and transit your encrypted data
  3. Legal compulsion — only under a valid subpoena or court order, and only the minimum required

None of these is a sale: we receive no consideration, the recipients are service providers bound by contract or a court, and the encrypted blobs remain unreadable in transit and at rest. We commit to a transparency report summarizing any compelled disclosures.

How this is enforceable

In short: A stated no-sale promise is enforceable under the CCPA by regulators, and misrepresenting it is an unfair business practice. We reinforce that with a PGP-signed statement in Git, integration into the binding terms of service, and a change-of-control clause that binds any acquirer.

The enforceability stack, strongest legal layer first:

  • Statutory — under the CCPA/CPRA a no-sale representation is enforceable by the California Privacy Protection Agency and Attorney General, and misstating it is an unfair business practice1
  • Contractual — the pledge is folded into the binding terms of service, making it part of your agreement with us
  • Successor-binding — a change-of-control clause carries the pledge to any acquirer, so a sale of the company cannot quietly enable a sale of your data
  • Cryptographic provenance — a PGP-signed copy of the pledge is archived in the public Git history, timestamped and tamper-evident

See also

  • Privacy policy — what we collect and never collect
  • Security — the end-to-end encryption behind these promises
  • Terms of service — where the pledge becomes contractually binding
  • About — why we are funded by subscriptions, not data

Footnotes

  1. The CCPA’s definition of “sale” and its enforcement are summarized by the California Attorney General: https://oag.ca.gov/privacy/ccpa. 2

  2. The CPRA added the concept of “sharing” for cross-context behavioral advertising; for the consolidated California privacy code see the official legislative text portal: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov.

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Author: Lena Park · Reviewed by: Marcus Reiter