PRIVACY POLICY

WHAT KIND OF INFORMATION DO WE COLLECT FROM YOU WHEN YOU VISIT OUR SITE?

When you sign up for our mailing and allocation list, create an account, or shop for wine in our store on cainfive.com, we collect personal information about you such as your name, address, postal code, phone number, etc. We need this information to put you on our mailing list, and to process payments and ship wine to you.

COOKIES

We use cookies when you visit our wine store to facilitate the transaction. We use them to confirm that you are logged into our website and interacting with your information. We don’t use cookies for any other purpose.

SHARING OF PERSONAL INFORMATION – WE DON’T DO IT (VERY MUCH)

We work with third parties to process transactions and to ship wine. We share only the personal information that is necessary to complete your transaction and facilitate shipment of wine to you. Under no circumstances will we share any personal information that we collect with any other third parties or web sites for any other purposes. All the information you give us is completely private and used solely for order processing and shipping. If you give us permission to send you marketing emails then we use your email for that purpose, but never does that email get sold or distributed to any other web site or list.

NEWSLETTER OPT-OUT

If you have chosen to opt into our postal or email newsletters and marketing emails and decide to opt out, we have a simple unsubscribe form that will let you get off our email list under the “Edit Profile” area of your “Account” section.

CONSUMER INQUIRIES AND PRIVACY

If you have any questions about your privacy, or want to make changes to your profile, or be removed from our marketing list, simply send us an email.

PROTECTING YOUR INFORMATION

Your credit card information is encrypted, “tokenized,” by our transaction processor and not stored by us or available to us or any other party. Any data that we store about you is kept behind a secure firewall in our database and is not accessible to the public in any way, until, of course, our third-party ecommerce provider is hacked, again—as it has been in the past. Hopefully they’ve learned their lesson!