Reference

Legal terms for India access

perabet sets out how access, account checks, records and request handling work for India.

India accessLocal lawData requestsAccount records
perabet Legal terms for India access
CONTACT PATHS

Where to send legal requests

If you need a copy of the data linked to your account, want a correction or need access checked for your location, use the contact paths below. We ask for enough detail to match the request to the account record, then we respond through the same channel or inside your account. If law requires a different route, we point you to that path before any action is taken.

Team online

Secure form

Use the secure form in your account area for correction, access or closure requests. We match it to the record we hold, then send the next step through the same route.

Email

If email is easier, send the address shown in your account profile and include your registered name, contact detail and what you want changed so we can check it quickly.

Chat

Open chat for quick questions about access, document status or cookie settings. For anything that changes a record, we may ask you to repeat the request in writing.

SAFE HANDLING

How we keep records safe

We keep only the data we need for access, security and record keeping. Cookies help the site remember your session and preferences, while account logs help us trace changes and spot misuse.

Data use

We use your account details to open, verify and keep your record current. If you ask for a change, we compare the request with the stored details before we update anything.

Cookies

Cookies store session state, language choice and basic page settings. You can clear them in your browser, but some parts of the account area may ask you to sign in again.

Account security

Keep your password private and use a device lock where you can. We flag unusual sign-in patterns and may ask for a fresh check before sensitive actions go through.

Retention

We keep records only for as long as needed for access, security, tax or dispute handling. After that period, the record is archived or removed under the rule that applies.

Change requests

To change your name, contact detail or stored preference, send the request from the same contact you used for the account when possible. That helps us confirm you are the account holder.

Who to contact

For legal questions, use the channel listed in your account area and add enough detail for us to trace the record. If local law changes, we follow the current rule for your location.

Common legal questions

These answers focus on access, records and request handling. If local law changes or your location is treated differently, the account flow will show the current position before you proceed, and our contact paths stay open for corrections, copies and other lawful requests. We keep the wording simple so you can see what we hold and how to ask for a change.

Access depends on local law and on where your account is used. If your location is outside the permitted area, the flow stops before account creation or sign-in.

Send a request through the secure form or email path in your account area, and include the contact detail tied to the account so we can match the record correctly.

Yes. Tell us which field needs changing, send the new value and use the contact method linked to the account. We may ask for a short extra check before we update it.

They store session state, language choice and basic page settings, so you do not need to reset them each time. You can clear them in your browser if you want to start fresh.

We use login checks, session logs and change tracking to spot unusual access. Sensitive actions may need a fresh sign-in or a confirmation step before they are accepted.

We keep records only for the period needed for access, security, legal duties and dispute handling. After that, they are archived or removed according to the rule that applies.

Use the contact route shown in your account area and add your registered name, contact detail and request type. We reply through that same route whenever possible.