Reference

6y6 legal terms for India

Before you open your account, this page shows how access, data use, stored records and request handling work at 6y6.

Account termsData useLocal lawRecord checks
6y6 6y6 legal terms for India
HELP DESK

How to reach us on legal matters

For legal requests, send one clear message and tell us the exact record, term or account detail you want checked.

Email your request Send the account detail, the clause you want checked and the change you want made. We use the registered email to confirm it is really your request before we act on records or settings.
In-account message If your account is open, send the request from the inbox area so we can match it to the right profile. That helps us trace the legal note, the stored record and the reply in one thread.
Postal notice For formal notices, use the postal address shown in your account area. Include your name, registered contact and the exact record or term you want us to handle so we can route it correctly.
DATA HANDLING

How we handle records and requests

This part of the site keeps things practical: account data is used for access checks, record handling and replies to legal requests; cookies keep your session and language choice in place; and…

Data use

We use account data to run access checks, answer legal requests and keep the service working. We do not turn that record into public text, and we only share it when the law or your request allows.

Cookies

Cookies store session state, language choice and basic page settings. They help us keep you signed in and reduce repeat checks, but they do not change the legal terms that apply to your account.

Security checks

When you ask for a change, we match the request against the account email, phone and recent actions. If the details do not line up, we may ask for another check before we touch the record.

Retention window

We keep records for the period needed to run the account, meet legal duties and settle account history. After that period, we remove, mask or archive the data under our retention rules.

Change requests

You can ask us to correct a name, contact detail or other stored field that no longer matches your account. We act only after the request is confirmed and the supporting record is clear.

Contact path

Use the contact channel shown in your account area for access, correction or erasure requests. Tell us what you need, which record you mean and the best way to reach you for a reply.

Questions about access, data and records

These questions cover who the page applies to, how records are kept, what cookies do, and how to send a correction request. We answer each request against the account details on file, because legal changes must be tied to the right profile. If local law changes, we follow the current rule in your region rather than any older version stored on the site.

It applies to your account where local law permits use of the service. If your region has a different rule, that local rule comes first and our terms follow it.

Yes. Write to us from the contact path in your account and ask for the records you want to see. We may confirm the request against your email, phone or recent activity first.

Cookies keep your session active, save language choices and reduce repeat checks on the same device. They do not replace the legal terms, and you can clear them through your browser at any time.

We keep records for as long as they are needed for account operation, legal duties and dispute handling. After that, they are removed, masked or archived under our retention rules.

Yes. Send the correct detail, the account name and a clear note about what should change. We will check the request against the record before we update anything.

If local law does not permit access, the account path remains closed there. We do not change that position by request, because local law controls eligibility and access in that region.

Use the email, in-account message or postal contact shown in your account area. Include the exact issue, your registered contact and the best time to reply so we can respond there.